glib/glib/gprintf.c
velsinki 8d2d12bd52 gprintf: Port doc comments to gi-docgen
Fixes broken links, and removes `%` and `#` notation in favor of inline
code, and limits indentation to two to prevent accidental formatting.

Fixes some style issues too, mainly removing periods at the end of
parameter and return descriptions.

Also removes trailing whitespace from the doc comments.

Helps: #3037
2024-01-25 11:19:23 +00:00

391 lines
11 KiB
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/* GLIB - Library of useful routines for C programming
* Copyright (C) 1995-1997, 2002 Peter Mattis, Red Hat, Inc.
*
* SPDX-License-Identifier: LGPL-2.1-or-later
*
* This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
* modify it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public
* License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either
* version 2.1 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
*
* This library is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
* but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
* MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU
* Lesser General Public License for more details.
*
* You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public
* License along with this library; if not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
*/
#include "config.h"
#include <stdarg.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#include <errno.h>
#include "gprintf.h"
#include "gprintfint.h"
/**
* g_printf:
* @format: a standard `printf()` format string, but notice
* [string precision pitfalls](string-utils.html#string-precision-pitfalls)
* @...: the arguments to insert in the output
*
* An implementation of the standard `printf()` function which supports
* positional parameters, as specified in the Single Unix Specification.
*
* As with the standard `printf()`, this does not automatically append a trailing
* new-line character to the message, so typically @format should end with its
* own new-line character.
*
* `glib/gprintf.h` must be explicitly included in order to use this function.
*
* Returns: the number of bytes printed
*
* Since: 2.2
**/
gint
g_printf (gchar const *format,
...)
{
va_list args;
gint retval;
va_start (args, format);
retval = g_vprintf (format, args);
va_end (args);
return retval;
}
/**
* g_fprintf:
* @file: (not nullable): the stream to write to
* @format: a standard `printf()` format string, but notice
* [string precision pitfalls](string-utils.html#string-precision-pitfalls)
* @...: the arguments to insert in the output
*
* An implementation of the standard `fprintf()` function which supports
* positional parameters, as specified in the Single Unix Specification.
*
* `glib/gprintf.h` must be explicitly included in order to use this function.
*
* Returns: the number of bytes printed
*
* Since: 2.2
**/
gint
g_fprintf (FILE *file,
gchar const *format,
...)
{
va_list args;
gint retval;
va_start (args, format);
retval = g_vfprintf (file, format, args);
va_end (args);
return retval;
}
/**
* g_sprintf:
* @string: A pointer to a memory buffer to contain the resulting string. It
* is up to the caller to ensure that the allocated buffer is large
* enough to hold the formatted result.
* @format: a standard `printf()` format string, but notice
* [string precision pitfalls](string-utils.html#string-precision-pitfalls)
* @...: the arguments to insert in the output
*
* An implementation of the standard `sprintf()` function which supports
* positional parameters, as specified in the Single Unix Specification.
*
* Note that it is usually better to use [func@GLib.snprintf], to avoid the
* risk of buffer overflow.
*
* `glib/gprintf.h` must be explicitly included in order to use this function.
*
* See also [func@GLib.strdup_printf].
*
* Returns: the number of bytes printed
*
* Since: 2.2
**/
gint
g_sprintf (gchar *string,
gchar const *format,
...)
{
va_list args;
gint retval;
va_start (args, format);
retval = g_vsprintf (string, format, args);
va_end (args);
return retval;
}
/**
* g_snprintf:
* @string: the buffer to hold the output
* @n: the maximum number of bytes to produce (including the
* terminating nul character)
* @format: a standard `printf()` format string, but notice
* [string precision pitfalls](string-utils.html#string-precision-pitfalls)
* @...: the arguments to insert in the output
*
* A safer form of the standard sprintf() function. The output is guaranteed
* to not exceed @n characters (including the terminating nul character), so
* it is easy to ensure that a buffer overflow cannot occur.
*
* See also [func@GLib.strdup_printf].
*
* In versions of GLib prior to 1.2.3, this function may return -1 if the
* output was truncated, and the truncated string may not be nul-terminated.
* In versions prior to 1.3.12, this function returns the length of the output
* string.
*
* The return value of g_snprintf() conforms to the snprintf()
* function as standardized in ISO C99. Note that this is different from
* traditional `snprintf()`, which returns the length of the output string.
*
* The format string may contain positional parameters, as specified in
* the Single Unix Specification.
*
* Returns: the number of bytes which would be produced if the buffer
* was large enough
**/
gint
g_snprintf (gchar *string,
gulong n,
gchar const *format,
...)
{
va_list args;
gint retval;
va_start (args, format);
retval = g_vsnprintf (string, n, format, args);
va_end (args);
return retval;
}
/**
* g_vprintf:
* @format: a standard `printf()` format string, but notice
* [string precision pitfalls](string-utils.html#string-precision-pitfalls)
* @args: the list of arguments to insert in the output
*
* An implementation of the standard `vprintf()` function which supports
* positional parameters, as specified in the Single Unix Specification.
*
* `glib/gprintf.h` must be explicitly included in order to use this function.
*
* Returns: the number of bytes printed
*
* Since: 2.2
**/
gint
g_vprintf (gchar const *format,
va_list args)
{
g_return_val_if_fail (format != NULL, -1);
return _g_vprintf (format, args);
}
/**
* g_vfprintf:
* @file: (not nullable): the stream to write to
* @format: a standard `printf()` format string, but notice
* [string precision pitfalls](string-utils.html#string-precision-pitfalls)
* @args: the list of arguments to insert in the output
*
* An implementation of the standard `fprintf()` function which supports
* positional parameters, as specified in the Single Unix Specification.
*
* `glib/gprintf.h` must be explicitly included in order to use this function.
*
* Returns: the number of bytes printed
*
* Since: 2.2
**/
gint
g_vfprintf (FILE *file,
gchar const *format,
va_list args)
{
g_return_val_if_fail (format != NULL, -1);
return _g_vfprintf (file, format, args);
}
/**
* g_vsprintf:
* @string: the buffer to hold the output
* @format: a standard `printf()` format string, but notice
* [string precision pitfalls](string-utils.html#string-precision-pitfalls)
* @args: the list of arguments to insert in the output
*
* An implementation of the standard `vsprintf()` function which supports
* positional parameters, as specified in the Single Unix Specification.
*
* `glib/gprintf.h` must be explicitly included in order to use this function.
*
* Returns: the number of bytes printed
*
* Since: 2.2
**/
gint
g_vsprintf (gchar *string,
gchar const *format,
va_list args)
{
g_return_val_if_fail (string != NULL, -1);
g_return_val_if_fail (format != NULL, -1);
return _g_vsprintf (string, format, args);
}
/**
* g_vsnprintf:
* @string: the buffer to hold the output
* @n: the maximum number of bytes to produce (including the
* terminating nul character)
* @format: a standard `printf()` format string, but notice
* [string precision pitfalls](string-utils.html#string-precision-pitfalls)
* @args: the list of arguments to insert in the output
*
* A safer form of the standard `vsprintf()` function. The output is guaranteed
* to not exceed @n characters (including the terminating nul character), so
* it is easy to ensure that a buffer overflow cannot occur.
*
* See also [func@GLib.strdup_vprintf].
*
* In versions of GLib prior to 1.2.3, this function may return -1 if the
* output was truncated, and the truncated string may not be nul-terminated.
* In versions prior to 1.3.12, this function returns the length of the output
* string.
*
* The return value of `g_vsnprintf()` conforms to the `vsnprintf()` function
* as standardized in ISO C99. Note that this is different from traditional
* `vsnprintf()`, which returns the length of the output string.
*
* The format string may contain positional parameters, as specified in
* the Single Unix Specification.
*
* Returns: the number of bytes which would be produced if the buffer
* was large enough
*/
gint
g_vsnprintf (gchar *string,
gulong n,
gchar const *format,
va_list args)
{
g_return_val_if_fail (n == 0 || string != NULL, -1);
g_return_val_if_fail (format != NULL, -1);
return _g_vsnprintf (string, n, format, args);
}
/**
* g_vasprintf:
* @string: (out) (not optional) (nullable): the return location for the
* newly-allocated string, which will be `NULL` if (and only if)
* this function fails
* @format: (not nullable): a standard `printf()` format string, but notice
* [string precision pitfalls](string-utils.html#string-precision-pitfalls)
* @args: the list of arguments to insert in the output
*
* An implementation of the GNU `vasprintf()` function which supports
* positional parameters, as specified in the Single Unix Specification.
* This function is similar to [func@GLib.vsprintf], except that it allocates a
* string to hold the output, instead of putting the output in a buffer
* you allocate in advance.
*
* The returned value in @string is guaranteed to be non-`NULL`, unless
* @format contains `%lc` or `%ls` conversions, which can fail if no
* multibyte representation is available for the given character.
*
* `glib/gprintf.h` must be explicitly included in order to use this function.
*
* Returns: the number of bytes printed, or -1 on failure
*
* Since: 2.4
**/
gint
g_vasprintf (gchar **string,
gchar const *format,
va_list args)
{
gint len;
g_return_val_if_fail (string != NULL, -1);
#if !defined(USE_SYSTEM_PRINTF)
len = _g_gnulib_vasprintf (string, format, args);
if (len < 0)
*string = NULL;
#elif defined (HAVE_VASPRINTF)
{
int saved_errno;
len = vasprintf (string, format, args);
saved_errno = errno;
if (len < 0)
{
if (saved_errno == ENOMEM)
{
/* Try and print a message to be a bit helpful, but stick to the
* bare minimum to avoid any code path which could try and fail to
* allocate additional memory. */
fputs (G_STRLOC, stderr);
fputs (": failed to allocate memory\n", stderr);
g_abort ();
}
else
*string = NULL;
}
}
#else
{
va_list args2;
char c;
int max_len;
va_copy (args2, args);
max_len = _g_vsnprintf (&c, 1, format, args);
if (max_len < 0)
{
/* This can happen if @format contains `%ls` or `%lc` and @args contains
* something not representable in the current locales encoding (which
* should be UTF-8, but ymmv). Basically: dont use `%ls` or `%lc`. */
va_end (args2);
*string = NULL;
return -1;
}
*string = g_new (gchar, (size_t) max_len + 1);
len = _g_vsprintf (*string, format, args2);
va_end (args2);
/* _g_vsprintf() should have exactly the same failure modes as _g_vsnprintf() */
g_assert (len >= 0);
}
#endif
return len;
}