10.1075 snprintf
POSIX specification:
https://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/functions/snprintf.html
Gnulib module: snprintf or snprintf-posix or snprintf-gnu
Portability problems fixed by either Gnulib module snprintf
or snprintf-posix
or snprintf-gnu
:
- This function is missing on some platforms:
MSVC 14.
- This function does not support format directives that access arguments in an
arbitrary order, such as
"%2$s"
, on some platforms:
NetBSD 3.0, mingw.
- This function does not return a byte count as specified in C99 on some
platforms:
HP-UX 11, Solaris 9, mingw.
Portability problems fixed by either Gnulib module snprintf-posix
or snprintf-gnu
:
- This function does not support size specifiers as in C99 (
hh
, ll
,
j
, t
, z
) on some platforms:
AIX 5.1, HP-UX 11.23, Solaris 9, Cygwin 1.5.24, old mingw, MSVC 9.
- This function does not support size specifiers as in C23 (
w8
,
w16
, w32
, w64
, wf8
, wf16
, wf32
,
wf64
) on some platforms:
glibc 2.37, musl libc, macOS 14, FreeBSD 13.2, NetBSD 10.0, OpenBSD 7.5, AIX 7.3, Solaris 11.4, Cygwin 3.5.3, mingw, MSVC, Android 9.0.
- printf of ‘long double’ numbers is unsupported on some platforms:
mingw, MSVC 14.
- printf
"%f"
, "%e"
, "%g"
of Infinity and NaN yields an
incorrect result on some platforms:
AIX 7.3, Solaris 11.4, mingw, MSVC 14.
- This function does not support the ‘a’ and ‘A’ directives on some
platforms:
FreeBSD 5.2.1, OpenBSD 4.0, AIX 5.2, HP-UX 11,
Solaris 11.4, Cygwin 1.5.x, mingw, MSVC 14.
- This function does not support the ‘b’ directive, required by ISO C23,
on some platforms:
glibc 2.34, musl libc, macOS 14, FreeBSD 13.2, NetBSD 10.0, OpenBSD 7.5,
AIX 7.3, HP-UX 11, Solaris 11.4, Cygwin 3.5.3, mingw, MSVC 14, Android 9.0.
- This function does not support the ‘F’ directive on some platforms:
NetBSD 3.0, AIX 5.1, HP-UX 11.23, Solaris 9,
Cygwin 1.5.x, mingw, MSVC 14.
- This function does not support the ‘ls’ directive on some platforms:
OpenBSD 4.0, Cygwin 1.5.x, Haiku.
- This function does not support precisions in the ‘ls’ directive correctly
on some platforms:
Solaris 11.4.
- This function doesn’t support the
'
flag on some platforms:
NetBSD 3.0, Cygwin 1.5.24, mingw, MSVC 14.
- This function does not round the argument of the ‘a’ directive correctly
on some platforms:
macOS 14, FreeBSD 14.0, NetBSD 10.0, OpenBSD 7.5, AIX 7.3, Solaris 11.4.
- printf
"%010f"
of NaN and Infinity yields an incorrect result (padded
with zeroes, or wrong capitalization) on some platforms:
Mac OS X 10.5, FreeBSD 6.0, NetBSD 5.0, AIX 7.3, Solaris 11.4, Cygwin 1.5.x, mingw, MSVC/clang.
- printf
"%#.0x"
or "%#.0X"
with a zero argument yields an
incorrect result (non-empty) on some platforms:
Mac OS X 10.6.
- This function does not support precisions larger than 512 or 1024 in integer,
floating-point and pointer output on some platforms:
AIX 7.1, Solaris 10/x86, mingw, MSVC/clang.
- This function mishandles large floating point precisions
(for example, formatting 1.0 with ‘"%.511f"’)
on some platforms:
Solaris 10.
- This function produces wrong output for the ‘lc’ directive with a NUL
wide character argument on some platforms:
musl libc 1.2.4.
- This function can crash in out-of-memory conditions on some platforms:
FreeBSD 14.0, NetBSD 5.0.
- This function does not truncate the result as specified in C99 on some platforms:
mingw, MSVC 14.
- This function does not fully support the ‘n’ directive on some platforms:
HP-UX 11, mingw.
Portability problems fixed by Gnulib module snprintf-gnu
:
- This function does not support the ‘B’ directive on some platforms:
glibc 2.34, musl libc, macOS 14, FreeBSD 13.2, NetBSD 10.0, OpenBSD 7.5, AIX 7.3, Solaris 11.4, Cygwin 3.5.3, mingw, MSVC, Android 9.0.
Portability problems fixed by either Gnulib module snprintf-posix
or snprintf-gnu
and additionally the Gnulib module printf-with-n-directive
:
- This function does not support the ‘n’ directive on some platforms:
glibc when used with
_FORTIFY_SOURCE >= 2
(set by default on Ubuntu),
macOS 14, OpenBSD, MSVC 14, Android.
Portability problems not fixed by Gnulib:
- The
%m
directive is not portable, use %s
mapped to an
argument of strerror(errno)
(or a version of strerror_r
)
instead.
- Formatting noncanonical ‘long double’ numbers produces
nonmeaningful results on some platforms:
glibc and others, on x86, x86_64, IA-64 CPUs.
- When formatting an integer with grouping flag, this function inserts thousands
separators even in the "C" locale on some platforms:
NetBSD 5.1.