When specified in a string literal, "\n" will be translated to the matching ascii code (0x0a
on linux), and stored as-is. It will not be stored as a backslash, followed by a literal n
. Escape sequences are for you convenience only, to allow string literals with embedded newlines.
On the other hand, your shell, running in the terminal, does not do such substitution: it submits a literal backslash and n
, which will be printed as such.
To have a newline printed, enter a newline:
$ echo "Hello
World" | ./your-program
echo -e "Hello,\nWorld" | ./testprogram
to convert the escape character to a newline rather than the literal tokens` and
n`, before passing it to the program.