This section describes the options for the ‘%d’, ‘%i’, ‘%o’, ‘%u’, ‘%x’, and ‘%X’ conversion specifications. These conversions print integers in various formats.
The ‘%d’ and ‘%i’ conversion specifications both print an
int
argument as a signed decimal number; while ‘%o’,
‘%u’, and ‘%x’ print the argument as an unsigned octal,
decimal, or hexadecimal number (respectively). The ‘%X’ conversion
specification is just like ‘%x’ except that it uses the characters
‘ABCDEF’ as digits instead of ‘abcdef’.
The following flags are meaningful:
strtoul
function (see Parsing of Integers) and scanf
with the ‘%i’ conversion
(see Numeric Input Conversions).
LC_NUMERIC
category; see General Numeric. This flag is a
GNU extension.
If a precision is supplied, it specifies the minimum number of digits to appear; leading zeros are produced if necessary. If you don't specify a precision, the number is printed with as many digits as it needs. If you convert a value of zero with an explicit precision of zero, then no characters at all are produced.
Without a type modifier, the corresponding argument is treated as an
int
(for the signed conversions ‘%i’ and ‘%d’) or
unsigned int
(for the unsigned conversions ‘%o’, ‘%u’,
‘%x’, and ‘%X’). Recall that since printf
and friends
are variadic, any char
and short
arguments are
automatically converted to int
by the default argument
promotions. For arguments of other integer types, you can use these
modifiers:
signed char
or unsigned
char
, as appropriate. A char
argument is converted to an
int
or unsigned int
by the default argument promotions
anyway, but the ‘h’ modifier says to convert it back to a
char
again.
This modifier was introduced in ISO C99.
short int
or unsigned
short int
, as appropriate. A short
argument is converted to an
int
or unsigned int
by the default argument promotions
anyway, but the ‘h’ modifier says to convert it back to a
short
again.
intmax_t
or uintmax_t
, as
appropriate.
This modifier was introduced in ISO C99.
long int
or unsigned long
int
, as appropriate. Two ‘l’ characters is like the ‘L’
modifier, below.
If used with ‘%c’ or ‘%s’ the corresponding parameter is
considered as a wide character or wide character string respectively.
This use of ‘l’ was introduced in Amendment 1 to ISO C90.
long long int
. (This type is
an extension supported by the GNU C compiler. On systems that don't
support extra-long integers, this is the same as long int
.)
The ‘q’ modifier is another name for the same thing, which comes
from 4.4 BSD; a long long int
is sometimes called a “quad”
int
.
ptrdiff_t
.
This modifier was introduced in ISO C99.
size_t
.
‘z’ was introduced in ISO C99. ‘Z’ is a GNU extension predating this addition and should not be used in new code.
Here is an example. Using the template string:
"|%5d|%-5d|%+5d|%+-5d|% 5d|%05d|%5.0d|%5.2d|%d|\n"
to print numbers using the different options for the ‘%d’ conversion gives results like:
| 0|0 | +0|+0 | 0|00000| | 00|0| | 1|1 | +1|+1 | 1|00001| 1| 01|1| | -1|-1 | -1|-1 | -1|-0001| -1| -01|-1| |100000|100000|+100000|+100000| 100000|100000|100000|100000|100000|
In particular, notice what happens in the last case where the number is too large to fit in the minimum field width specified.
Here are some more examples showing how unsigned integers print under various format options, using the template string:
"|%5u|%5o|%5x|%5X|%#5o|%#5x|%#5X|%#10.8x|\n"
| 0| 0| 0| 0| 0| 0| 0| 00000000| | 1| 1| 1| 1| 01| 0x1| 0X1|0x00000001| |100000|303240|186a0|186A0|0303240|0x186a0|0X186A0|0x000186a0|