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4.62 sscanf, fscanf, scanf—scan and format input

Synopsis

     #include <stdio.h>
     
     int scanf(const char *restrict format, ...);
     int fscanf(FILE *restrict fd, const char *restrict format, ...);
     int sscanf(const char *restrict str, const char *restrict format, ...);
     
     int _scanf_r(struct _reent *ptr, const char *restrict format, ...);
     int _fscanf_r(struct _reent *ptr, FILE *restrict fd,
         const char *restrict format, ...);
     int _sscanf_r(struct _reent *ptr, const char *restrict str,
         const char *restrict format, ...);
     

Description
scanf scans a series of input fields from standard input, one character at a time. Each field is interpreted according to a format specifier passed to scanf in the format string at *format. scanf stores the interpreted input from each field at the address passed to it as the corresponding argument following format. You must supply the same number of format specifiers and address arguments as there are input fields.

There must be sufficient address arguments for the given format specifiers; if not the results are unpredictable and likely disasterous. Excess address arguments are merely ignored.

scanf often produces unexpected results if the input diverges from an expected pattern. Since the combination of gets or fgets followed by sscanf is safe and easy, that is the preferred way to be certain that a program is synchronized with input at the end of a line.

fscanf and sscanf are identical to scanf, other than the source of input: fscanf reads from a file, and sscanf from a string.

The routines _scanf_r, _fscanf_r, and _sscanf_r are reentrant versions of scanf, fscanf, and sscanf that take an additional first argument pointing to a reentrancy structure.

The string at *format is a character sequence composed of zero or more directives. Directives are composed of one or more whitespace characters, non-whitespace characters, and format specifications.

Whitespace characters are blank ( ), tab (\t), or newline (\n). When scanf encounters a whitespace character in the format string it will read (but not store) all consecutive whitespace characters up to the next non-whitespace character in the input.

Non-whitespace characters are all other ASCII characters except the percent sign (%). When scanf encounters a non-whitespace character in the format string it will read, but not store a matching non-whitespace character.

Format specifications tell scanf to read and convert characters from the input field into specific types of values, and store then in the locations specified by the address arguments.

Trailing whitespace is left unread unless explicitly matched in the format string.

The format specifiers must begin with a percent sign (%) and have the following form:

            %[*][width][size]type

Each format specification begins with the percent character (%). The other fields are:


Returns
scanf returns the number of input fields successfully scanned, converted and stored; the return value does not include scanned fields which were not stored.

If scanf attempts to read at end-of-file, the return value is EOF.

If no fields were stored, the return value is 0.

scanf might stop scanning a particular field before reaching the normal field end character, or may terminate entirely.

scanf stops scanning and storing the current field and moves to the next input field (if any) in any of the following situations:

When scanf stops scanning the current input field for one of these reasons, the next character is considered unread and used as the first character of the following input field, or the first character in a subsequent read operation on the input.

scanf will terminate under the following circumstances:

When the format string contains a character sequence that is not part of a format specification, the same character sequence must appear in the input; scanf will scan but not store the matched characters. If a conflict occurs, the first conflicting character remains in the input as if it had never been read.


Portability
scanf is ANSI C.

Supporting OS subroutines required: close, fstat, isatty, lseek, read, sbrk, write.