std::vscanf, std::vfscanf, std::vsscanf - cppreference.com
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| Defined in header |
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(1) | (since C++11) |
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(2) | (since C++11) |
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(3) | (since C++11) |
Reads data from a variety of sources, interprets it according to format and stores the results into locations defined by vlist.
1) Reads the data from stdin.
2) Reads the data from file stream stream.
3) Reads the data from null-terminated character string buffer.
Parameters
| stream | - | input file stream to read from |
| buffer | - | pointer to a null-terminated character string to read from |
| format | - | pointer to a null-terminated character string specifying how to read the input |
| vlist | - | variable argument list containing the receiving arguments. |
The format string consists of
- non-whitespace multibyte characters except
%: each such character in the format string consumes exactly one identical character from the input stream, or causes the function to fail if the next character on the stream does not compare equal. - whitespace characters: any single whitespace character in the format string consumes all available consecutive whitespace characters from the input (determined as if by calling std::isspace in a loop). Note that there is no difference between
"\n"," ","\t\t", or other whitespace in the format string. - conversion specifications. Each conversion specification has the following format:
- introductory
%character.
- introductory
- (optional) assignment-suppressing character
*. If this option is present, the function does not assign the result of the conversion to any receiving argument.
- (optional) assignment-suppressing character
- (optional) integer number (greater than zero) that specifies maximum field width, that is, the maximum number of characters that the function is allowed to consume when doing the conversion specified by the current conversion specification. Note that
%sand%[may lead to buffer overflow if the width is not provided.
- (optional) integer number (greater than zero) that specifies maximum field width, that is, the maximum number of characters that the function is allowed to consume when doing the conversion specified by the current conversion specification. Note that
- (optional) length modifier that specifies the size of the receiving argument, that is, the actual destination type. This affects the conversion accuracy and overflow rules. The default destination type is different for each conversion type (see table below).
- conversion format specifier.
The following format specifiers are available:
| Conversion specifier |
Explanation | Expected Argument type | ||||||||
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| Length Modifier→ | hh
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h
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none | l
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ll
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j
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z
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t
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L
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| Only available since C++11→ | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | |||||
%
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Matches literal |
N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A |
c
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Matches a character or a sequence of characters.
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N/A | N/A |
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N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A |
s
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Matches a sequence of non-whitespace characters (a string).
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[set ]
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Matches a non-empty sequence of character from set of characters.
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d
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Matches a decimal integer.
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N/A |
i
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Matches an integer.
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u
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Matches an unsigned decimal integer.
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o
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Matches an unsigned octal integer.
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xX
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Matches an unsigned hexadecimal integer.
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n
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Returns the number of characters read so far.
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a (C++11)A (C++11)eEfF (C++11)gG
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Matches a floating-point number.
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N/A | N/A |
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N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A |
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p
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Matches implementation defined character sequence defining a pointer.
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N/A | N/A |
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N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A |
| Notes | ||||||||||
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For every conversion specifier other than All conversion specifiers other than The conversion specifiers The conversion specifiers The correct conversion specifications for the fixed-width integer types (std::int8_t, etc) are defined in the header <cinttypes> (although SCNdMAX, SCNuMAX, etc is synonymous with There is a sequence point after the action of each conversion specifier; this permits storing multiple fields in the same “sink” variable. When parsing an incomplete floating-point value that ends in the exponent with no digits, such as parsing If a conversion specification is invalid, the behavior is undefined. | ||||||||||
Return value
Number of arguments successfully read, or EOF if failure occurs.
Notes
All these functions invoke va_arg at least once, the value of arg is indeterminate after the return. These functions to not invoke va_end, and it must be done by the caller.
Example
#include <cstdarg> #include <cstdio> #include <iostream> #include <stdexcept> void checked_sscanf(int count, const char* buf, const char *fmt, ...) { std::va_list ap; va_start(ap, fmt); if (std::vsscanf(buf, fmt, ap) != count) throw std::runtime_error("parsing error"); va_end(ap); } int main() { try { int n, m; std::cout << "Parsing '1 2'... "; checked_sscanf(2, "1 2", "%d %d", &n, &m); std::cout << "success\n"; std::cout << "Parsing '1 a'... "; checked_sscanf(2, "1 a", "%d %d", &n, &m); std::cout << "success\n"; } catch (const std::exception& e) { std::cout << e.what() << '\n'; } }
Output:
Parsing '1 2'... success Parsing '1 a'... parsing error