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scanf (3)

SCANF(3)                   Linux Programmer's Manual                  SCANF(3)



NAME
       scanf,  fscanf, sscanf, vscanf, vsscanf, vfscanf - input format conver-
       sion

SYNOPSIS
       #include<stdio.h>
       intscanf(constchar*format,...);
       intfscanf(FILE*stream,constchar*format,...);
       intsscanf(constchar*str,constchar*format,...);

       #include<stdarg.h>
       intvscanf(constchar*format,va_list ap);
       intvsscanf(constchar*str,constchar*format,va_list ap);
       intvfscanf(FILE*stream,constchar*format,va_list ap);

DESCRIPTION
       The scanf family of functions scans input  according  to  a  format  as
       described  below.   This  format may contain conversion specifiers; the
       results from such conversions, if any, are stored through  the  pointer
       arguments.   The  scanf  function  reads  input from the standard input
       stream stdin, fscanf reads input from the stream  pointer  stream,  and
       sscanf reads its input from the character string pointed to by str.

       The  vfscanf  function is analogous to vfprintf(3) and reads input from
       the stream pointer stream using a variable argument  list  of  pointers
       (see  stdarg(3).   The  vscanf  function scans a variable argument list
       from the standard input and  the  vsscanf  function  scans  it  from  a
       string;  these  are  analogous  to  the  vprintf and vsprintf functions
       respectively.

       Each successive pointer argument must  correspond  properly  with  each
       successive  conversion  specifier  (but  see 'suppression' below).  All
       conversions are introduced by the % (percent sign) character.  The for-
       mat  string  may  also  contain other characters.  White space (such as
       blanks, tabs, or newlines) in the format string  match  any  amount  of
       white  space,  including  none,  in the input.  Everything else matches
       only itself.  Scanning stops when an input  character  does  not  match
       such  a format character.  Scanning also stops when an input conversion
       cannot be made (see below).

CONVERSIONS
       Following the % character introducing a conversion there may be a  num-
       ber of flag characters, as follows:

       *      Suppresses  assignment.   The  conversion that follows occurs as
              usual, but no pointer is used; the result of the  conversion  is
              simply discarded.

       a      (glibc) Indicates that the conversion will be s, the needed mem-
              ory space for the string will be malloc'ed  and the  pointer  to
              it will be assigned to the char pointer variable, which does not
              have to be initialized before.  This flag does not exist in ANSI
              C (C89) and has a different meaning in C99.

       a      (C99) Equivalent to f.

       h      Indicates  that the conversion will be one of dioux or n and the
              next pointer is a pointer to a short int (rather than int).

       l      Indicates either that the conversion will be one of dioux  or  n
              and  the  next  pointer  is a pointer to a long int (rather than
              int), or that the conversion will be one of  efg  and  the  next
              pointer  is a pointer to double (rather than float).  Specifying
              two l flags is equivalent to the L flag.

       L      Indicates that the conversion will be either efg  and  the  next
              pointer  is  a  pointer to long double or the conversion will be
              dioux and the next pointer is a pointer  to  long  long.   (Note
              that  long  long  is  not an ANSI C type. Any program using this
              will not be portable to all architectures).

       q      equivalent to L.  This flag does not exist in ANSI C.

       In addition to these flags, there may  be  an  optional  maximum  field
       width,  expressed  as  a decimal integer, between the % and the conver-
       sion.  If no width is given, a default of 'infinity' is used (with  one
       exception,  below);  otherwise at most this many characters are scanned
       in processing the conversion.  Before conversion begins,  most  conver-
       sions  skip  white  space;  this white space is not counted against the
       field width.

       The following conversions are available:

       %      Matches a literal '%'.  That  is,  '%%'  in  the  format  string
              matches  a  single  input '%' character.  No conversion is done,
              and assignment does not occur.

       d      Matches an optionally signed decimal integer; the  next  pointer
              must be a pointer to int.

       D      Equivalent  to ld; this exists only for backwards compatibility.
              (Note: thus only in libc4. In libc5 and glibc the %D is silently
              ignored, causing old programs to fail mysteriously.)

       i      Matches an optionally signed integer; the next pointer must be a
              pointer to int.  The integer is read in base  16  if  it  begins
              with  '0x' or '0X', in base 8 if it begins with '0', and in base
              10 otherwise.  Only characters that correspond to the  base  are
              used.

       o      Matches  an  unsigned  octal integer; the next pointer must be a
              pointer to unsigned int.

       u      Matches an unsigned decimal integer; the next pointer must be  a
              pointer to unsigned int.

       x      Matches  an  unsigned hexadecimal integer; the next pointer must
              be a pointer to unsigned int.

       X      Equivalent to x.

       f      Matches an optionally signed  floating-point  number;  the  next
              pointer must be a pointer to float.

       e      Equivalent to f.

       g      Equivalent to f.

       E      Equivalent to f.

       s      Matches  a  sequence  of  non-white-space  characters;  the next
              pointer must be a pointer to char, and the array must  be  large
              enough  to accept all the sequence and the terminating NUL char-
              acter.  The input string stops at white space or at the  maximum
              field width, whichever occurs first.

       c      Matches  a  sequence  of width count characters (default 1); the
              next pointer must be a pointer to char, and there must be enough
              room  for all the characters (no terminating NUL is added).  The
              usual skip of leading white space is suppressed.  To skip  white
              space first, use an explicit space in the format.

       [      Matches a nonempty sequence of characters from the specified set
              of accepted characters; the next pointer must be  a  pointer  to
              char,  and  there  must be enough room for all the characters in
              the string, plus a terminating NUL character.  The usual skip of
              leading  white space is suppressed.  The string is to be made up
              of characters in (or not  in)  a  particular  set;  the  set  is
              defined  by  the characters between the open bracket [ character
              and a close bracket ] character.  The set excludes those charac-
              ters  if the first character after the open bracket is a circum-
              flex ^.  To include a close bracket in  the  set,  make  it  the
              first  character  after  the open bracket or the circumflex; any
              other position will end the set.  The hyphen character - is also
              special;  when  placed between two other characters, it adds all
              intervening characters to the set.  To include a hyphen, make it
              the   last  character  before  the  final  close  bracket.   For
              instance, '[^]0-9-]' means  the  set  'everything  except  close
              bracket,  zero  through nine, and hyphen'.  The string ends with
              the appearance of a character not in the (or, with a circumflex,
              in) set or when the field width runs out.

       p      Matches  a  pointer  value (as printed by '%p' in printf(3); the
              next pointer must be a pointer to void.

       n      Nothing is expected; instead, the number of characters  consumed
              thus  far  from  the  input  is stored through the next pointer,
              which must be a pointer to  int.   This  is  not  a  conversion,
              although  it  can be suppressed with the * flag.  The C standard
              says: 'Execution of  a  %n  directive  does  not  increment  the
              assignment  count  returned  at the completion of execution' but
              the Corrigendum seems to contradict this. Probably  it  is  wise
              not  to  make any assumptions on the effect of %n conversions on
              the return value.



RETURNVALUE
       These functions return the number of input items assigned, which can be
       fewer than provided for, or even zero, in the event of a matching fail-
       ure.  Zero indicates that, while there was input available, no  conver-
       sions  were assigned; typically this is due to an invalid input charac-
       ter, such as an alphabetic character for a '%d' conversion.  The  value
       EOF  is  returned if an input failure occurs before any conversion such
       as an end-of-file occurs. If an error or end-of-file occurs after  con-
       version  has  begun,  the number of conversions which were successfully
       completed is returned.

SEEALSO
       strtol(3), strtoul(3), strtod(3), getc(3), printf(3)

CONFORMINGTO
       The functions fscanf, scanf, and sscanf  conform  to  ANSI  X3.159-1989
       (''ANSI C'').

       The q flag is the BSD 4.4 notation for long long, while ll or the usage
       of L in integer conversions is the GNU notation.

       The Linux version of these functions is based on the GNU libio library.
       Take  a  look  at the info documentation of GNU libc (glibc-1.08) for a
       more concise description.

BUGS
       All functions are fully ANSI X3.159-1989 conformant,  but  provide  the
       additional  flags  q  and a as well as an additional behaviour of the L
       and l flags. The latter may be considered to be a bug,  as  it  changes
       the behaviour of flags defined in ANSI X3.159-1989.

       Some  combinations  of  flags defined by ANSI C are not making sense in
       ANSI C (e.g.  %Ld).  While they may have a  well-defined  behaviour  on
       Linux, this need not to be so on other architectures. Therefore it usu-
       ally is better to use flags that are not defined by ANSI C at all, i.e.
       use q instead of L in combination with diouxX conversions or ll.

       The  usage  of  q  is  not the same as on BSD 4.4, as it may be used in
       float conversions equivalently to L.



LINUX MANPAGE                     1995-11-01                          SCANF(3)

CMSG_ALIGNfmodllroundfstrncmp
CMSG_FIRSTHDRfnmatchllroundlstrncpy
CMSG_NXTHDRfopenlocaleconvstrndup
CMSG_SPACEforkptylocaltimestrndupa
MB_CUR_MAXfpathconflockfstrnlen
MB_LEN_MAXfprintflogstrpbrk
__fbufsizefpurgelog10strptime
__flbffputclog1pstrrchr
__fpendingfputc_unlockedlogin_ttystrsep
__fpurgefputslogwtmpstrsignal
__freadablefputs_unlockedlongjmpstrspn
__freadingfputwclrand48strstr
__fsetlockingfputwc_unlockedlrintstrtod
__fwritablefputwslrintfstrtof
__fwritingfputws_unlockedlrintlstrtok
__malloc_hookfreadlroundstrtok_r
__setfpucwfread_unlockedlroundfstrtol
_flushlbffreelroundlstrtold
a64lfreeaddrinfolsearchstrtoll
abortfreehostentmakecontextstrtoq
absfreopenmallocstrtoul
acosfrexpmalloc_hookstrtoull
acoshfscanfmblenstrtouq
addmntentfseekmbrlenstrverscmp
allocafseekombrtowcstrxfrm
alphasortfsetposmbsinitsvc_destroy
argz_addftellmbsnrtowcssvc_freeargs
argz_add_sepftellombsrtowcssvc_getargs
argz_appendftimembstowcssvc_getcaller
argz_countftokmbtowcsvc_getreq
argz_createftrylockfilememalignsvc_getreqset
argz_create_sepftsmemccpysvc_register
argz_deletefts_childrenmemchrsvc_run
argz_extractfts_closememcmpsvc_sendreply
argz_insertfts_openmemcpysvc_unregister
argz_nextfts_readmemfrobsvcerr_auth
argz_replacefts_setmemmemsvcerr_decode
argz_stringifyftwmemmovesvcerr_noproc
asctimefunlockfilememrchrsvcerr_noprog
asinfwidememsetsvcerr_progvers
asinhfwprintfmkdtempsvcerr_systemerr
asprintffwritemkfifosvcerr_weakauth
assertfwrite_unlockedmkstempsvcfd_create
assert_perrorgai_strerrormktempsvcraw_create
atangammamktimesvctcp_create
atan2gammafmodfsvcudp_bufcreate
atanhgammalmpoolsvcudp_create
atexitgcvtmrand48swab
atofget_current_dir_namemtraceswapcontext
atoiget_myaddressmuntraceswprintf
atolgetaddrinfonansysconf
atollgetcnanfsyslog
atoqgetc_unlockednanlsystem
auth_destroygetcharnearbyinttan
authnone_creategetchar_unlockednearbyintftanh
authunix_creategetcwdnearbyintltcdrain
authunix_create_defaultgetdatenetlinktcflow
basenamegetdate_rnextaftertcflush
bcmpgetdelimnextafterftcgetattr
bcopygetdirentriesnextafterltcgetpgrp
bindresvportgetenvnexttowardtcgetsid
bsearchgetfsentnexttowardftcsendbreak
bstringgetfsfilenexttowardltcsetattr
btowcgetfsspecnftwtcsetpgrp
btreegetgrentnl_langinfotdelete
byteordergetgrgidnrand48telldir
bzerogetgrnamntohltempnam
callocgethostbyaddrntohstermios
callrpcgethostbynameon_exittfind
catclosegethostbyname2opendirtgamma
catgetsgethostbyname2_ropenlogtgammaf
catopengethostbyname_ropenptytgammal
cbrtgetipnodebyaddrpathconftimegm
ceilgetipnodebynamepclosetimelocal
ceilfgetlineperrortmpfile
ceillgetloadavgpmap_getmapstmpnam
cfgetispeedgetloginpmap_getporttoascii
cfgetospeedgetmntentpmap_rmtcalltolower
cfmakerawgetnameinfopmap_settoupper
cfsetispeedgetnetbyaddrpmap_unsettowctrans
cfsetospeedgetnetbynamepopentowlower
clearenvgetnetentposix_memaligntowupper
clearerrgetoptpowtrunc
clearerr_unlockedgetopt_longprintftruncf
clnt_broadcastgetopt_long_onlyprofiltruncl
clnt_callgetpasspsignaltsearch
clnt_controlgetprotobynameptsnamettyname
clnt_creategetprotobynumberputcttyname_r
clnt_destroygetprotoentputc_unlockedttyslot
clnt_freeresgetptputchartwalk
clnt_geterrgetpwputchar_unlockedtzset
clnt_pcreateerrorgetpwentputenvulimit
clnt_perrnogetpwnamputpwentundocumented
clnt_perrorgetpwuidputsungetc
clnt_spcreateerrorgetrpcbynamepututlineungetwc
clnt_sperrnogetrpcbynumberpututxlineunlocked_stdio
clnt_sperrorgetrpcentputwunlockpt
clntraw_creategetrpcportputwcunsetenv
clnttcp_creategetsputwc_unlockedupdwtmp
clntudp_bufcreategetservbynameputwcharusleep
clntudp_creategetservbyportputwchar_unlockedutmpname
clockgetserventqecvtva_arg
closedirgetttyentqecvt_rva_end
closeloggetttynamqfcvtva_start
cmsggetumaskqfcvt_rvalloc
confstrgetusershellqgcvtvasprintf
copysigngetutentqsortvdprintf
copysignfgetutidqueueverr
copysignlgetutlineraiseverrx
cosgetutxentrandversionsort
coshgetutxidrandomvfprintf
cryptgetutxlinercmdvfscanf
ctermidgetwre_compvfwprintf
ctimegetwcre_execvprintf
cuseridgetwc_unlockedreaddirvscanf
daemongetwcharreallocvsnprintf
dbgetwchar_unlockedrealpathvsprintf
dbopengetwdrecnovsscanf
difftimeglobregcompvswprintf
dirfdglobfreeregerrorvsyslog
dirnamegmtimeregexvwarn
divgrantptregexecvwarnx
dlclosegsignalregfreevwprintf
dlerrorhashregisterrpcwarn
dlopenhasmntoptremovewarnx
dlsymhcreateremquewcpcpy
dn_comphcreate_rres_initwcpncpy
dn_expandhdestroyres_mkquerywcrtomb
dprintfhdestroy_rres_querywcscasecmp
drand48herrorres_querydomainwcscat
dremhsearchres_searchwcschr
dysizehsearch_rres_sendwcscmp
ecvthstrerrorresolverwcscpy
ecvt_rhtonlrewindwcscspn
encrypthtonsrewinddirwcsdup
endfsenthypotrindexwcslen
endgrenticonvrintwcsncasecmp
endhostenticonv_closerintfwcsncat
endmntenticonv_openrintlwcsncmp
endnetentimaxabsroundwcsncpy
endprotoentindexroundfwcsnlen
endpwentinetroundlwcsnrtombs
endrpcentinet_addrrpcwcspbrk
endserventinet_atonrresvportwcsrchr
endttyentinet_lnaofrtnetlinkwcsrtombs
endusershellinet_makeaddrruserokwcsspn
endutentinet_netofscandirwcsstr
endutxentinet_networkscanfwcstok
envz_addinet_ntoaseed48wcstombs
envz_entryinet_ntopseekdirwcswidth
envz_getinet_ptonsetbufwctob
envz_mergeinfnansetbufferwctomb
envz_removeinitgroupssetenvwctrans
envz_stripinitstatesetfsentwctype
erand48insquesetgrentwcwidth
erfintrosethostentwmemchr
erfciruseroksetjmpwmemcmp
errisalnumsetkeywmemcpy
errnoisalphasetlinebufwmemmove
errxisasciisetlocalewmemset
ether_atonisattysetlogmaskwprintf
ether_aton_risblanksetmntentxdr
ether_hosttoniscntrlsetnetentxdr_accepted_reply
ether_lineisdigitsetprotoentxdr_array
ether_ntoaisgraphsetpwentxdr_authunix_parms
ether_ntoa_risinfsetrpcentxdr_bool
ether_ntohostislowersetserventxdr_bytes
execisnansetstatexdr_callhdr
execlisprintsetttyentxdr_callmsg
execleispunctsetusershellxdr_char
execlpisspacesetutentxdr_destroy
execvisuppersetutxentxdr_double
execvpiswalnumsetvbufxdr_enum
exitiswalphashm_openxdr_float
expiswblanksigaddsetxdr_free
expm1iswcntrlsigdelsetxdr_getpos
fabsiswctypesigemptysetxdr_inline
fabsfiswdigitsigfillsetxdr_int
fabsliswgraphsiginterruptxdr_long
fcloseiswlowersigismemberxdr_opaque
fclosealliswprintsiglongjmpxdr_opaque_auth
fcvtiswpunctsignbitxdr_pmap
fcvt_riswspacesigsetjmpxdr_pmaplist
fdopeniswuppersigsetopsxdr_pointer
feclearexceptiswxdigitsinxdr_reference
fegetenvisxdigitsinhxdr_rejected_reply
fegetexceptflagj0sleepxdr_replymsg
fegetroundj0fsnprintfxdr_setpos
feholdexceptj0lsprintfxdr_short
fenvj1sqrtxdr_string
feofj1fsrandxdr_u_char
feof_unlockedj1lsrand48xdr_u_int
feraiseexceptjnsrandomxdr_u_long
ferrorjnfsscanfxdr_u_short
ferror_unlockedjnlssignalxdr_union
fesetenvjrand48stdargxdr_vector
fesetexceptflagkey_decryptsessionstderrxdr_void
fesetroundkey_encryptsessionstdinxdr_wrapstring
fetestexceptkey_gendesstdioxdrmem_create
feupdateenvkey_secretkey_is_setstdio_extxdrrec_create
fflushkey_setsecretstdoutxdrrec_endofrecord
fflush_unlockedkillpgstpcpyxdrrec_eof
ffsklogctlstpncpyxdrrec_skiprecord
fgetcl64astrcasecmpxdrstdio_create
fgetc_unlockedlabsstrcatxprt_register
fgetgrentlcong48strchrxprt_unregister
fgetposldexpstrcmpy0
fgetpwentldivstrcolly0f
fgetslfindstrcpyy0l
fgets_unlockedlgammastrcspny1
fgetwclgamma_rstrdupy1f
fgetwc_unlockedlgammafstrdupay1l
fgetwslgammaf_rstrerroryn
fgetws_unlockedlgammalstrerror_rynf
filenolgammal_rstrfmonynl
fileno_unlockedllabsstrfry 
finitelldivstrftime 
flockfilellrintstring 
floorllrintfstrlen 
floorfllrintlstrncasecmp 


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