17
int x;
printf("hello %n World\n", &x);
printf("%d\n", x);
1
  • It's interesting that this was closed, because there is an existing answer. This was asked and answered in 2008. The one that it is linked to is from 2010.
    – EvilTeach
    Jan 20 at 17:54

7 Answers 7

15

It's not so useful for printf(), but it can be very useful for sscanf(), especially if you're parsing a string in multiple iterations. fscanf() and scanf() automatically advance their internal pointers by the amount of input read, but sscanf() does not. For example:

char stringToParse[256];
...
char *curPosInString = stringToParse;  // start parsing at the beginning
int bytesRead;
while(needsParsing())
{
    sscanf(curPosInString, "(format string)%n", ..., &bytesRead);  // check the return value here
    curPosInString += bytesRead;  // Advance read pointer
    ...
}
4

Depends what you mean by practical. There are always other ways to accomplish it (print into a string buffer with s[n]printf and calculate the length, for example).

However

int len;
char *thing = "label of unknown length";
char *value = "value value value"
char *value2="second line of value";
printf ("%s other stuff: %n", thing, &len);
printf ("%s\n%*s, value, len, value2);

should produce

label of unknown length other stuff: value value value
                                     second line of value

(although untested, I'm not near a C compiler)

Which is just about practical as a way of aligning things, but I wouldn't want to see it in code. There are better ways of doing it.

2
  • Apart from the missing semicolon and closing quote, this doesn't work as indicated because the total width of %*s (including value2) is set to len, not the number of initial spaces. So you'll either have to add strlen(value2) to len or use something like printf("%s\n%*s%s",value,len,"",value2).
    – mweerden
    Dec 9, 2008 at 18:28
  • @mweerden, thanks, that will teach me to write things like this on the train (I should have used a right-aligned example, which would have worked :)) The idea is still clear, I hope. And it's still too "clever" for real code. Dec 9, 2008 at 19:32
3

It's fairly esoteric. If you need to replace a placeholder in the generated string later you might want to remember an index into the middle of the string, so that you don't have to either save the original printf parameter or parse the string.

1

It could possibly be used as a quick way to get the lengths of various substrings.

1
#include <stdio.h>
int main(int argc, char* argv[])
{
    int col10 = (10 - 1);
    int col25 = (25 - 1);

    int pos1 = 0;
    int pos2 = 0;

    printf("    5    10   15   20   25   30\n");

    printf("%s%n%*s%n%*s\n",                     "fried", 
                            &pos1, col10 - pos1, "green",   
                            &pos2, col25 - pos2, "tomatos");


    printf("    ^    ^    ^    ^    ^    ^\n");

    printf("%d %d\n", pos1, pos2);
    printf("%d %d\n", col10 - pos1, col25 - pos2);

    return 0;
}

I am missing something here for sure. Tomatos is too far to the right.

1
  • The problem is that you can't use the values that get assigned to pos1 and pos2 in the same call to printf. All arguments are evaluated before the call, meaning that col10-pos1==col10 and col25-pos2==col25. The correct positioning of "green" is accidental. You also made the same mistake as Paul.
    – mweerden
    Dec 9, 2008 at 20:22
0

you can call

int _get_printf_count_output();

to see if %n support is enable, or use

int _set_printf_count_output( int enable );

to Enable or disable support of the %n format.

from MSDN VS2008

0

Here's something from the VS2005 CRT code:

/* if %n is disabled, we skip an arg and print 'n' */
if ( !_get_printf_count_output() )
{
   _VALIDATE_RETURN(("'n' format specifier disabled", 0), EINVAL, -1);
   break;
}

which brings up this:

[Dead link removed]

for the following line:

printf ("%s other stuff: %n", thing, &len);

I'm guessing this is mainly to avoid what @eJames is talking about.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.