The printf function formats and prints a series of characters and values to the standard output stream, stdout. If arguments follow the format string, the format string must contain specifications that determine the output format for the arguments. printf and fprintf behave identically except that printf writes output to stdout rather than to a destination of type FILE.
wprintf is a wide-character version of printf; format is a wide-character string. wprintf and printf behave identically if the stream is opened in ANSI mode. printf does not currently support output into a UNICODE stream.
The versions of these functions with the _l suffix are identical except that they use the locale parameter passed in instead of the current thread locale.
Generic-Text Routine Mappings
TCHAR.H routine
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_UNICODE & _MBCS not defined
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_MBCS defined
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_unicode defined
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_tprintf
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printf
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printf
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wprintf
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The format argument consists of ordinary characters, escape sequences, and (if arguments follow format) format specifications. The ordinary characters and escape sequences are copied to stdout in order of their appearance. For example, the line:
printf("Line one\n\t\tLine two\n");
produces the output:
Format specifications always begin with a percent sign (%) and are read left to right. When printf encounters the first format specification (if any), it converts the value of the first argument after format and outputs it accordingly. The second format specification causes the second argument to be converted and output, and so on. If there are more arguments than there are format specifications, the extra arguments are ignored. The results are undefined if there are not enough arguments for all the format specifications.
Security Note: |
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Ensure that
format is not a user-defined string.
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Generic-Text Routine Mappings
Tchar.h routine
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_UNICODE and _MBCS not defined
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_MBCS defined
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_UNICODE defined
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_tprintf
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printf
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printf
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wprintf
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_tprintf_l
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_printf_l
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_printf_l
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_wprintf_l
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