2003-01-07 Charles Wilson <cwilson@ece.gatech.edu>

* libc/stdio/sprintf.c: fix typo
        * libc/stdio/vfprintf.c: fix typo
This commit is contained in:
Jeff Johnston 2003-01-07 20:02:33 +00:00
parent d4c3a750e7
commit be9c60e52e
3 changed files with 15 additions and 10 deletions

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@ -1,3 +1,8 @@
2003-01-07 Charles Wilson <cwilson@ece.gatech.edu>
* libc/stdio/sprintf.c: fix typo
* libc/stdio/vfprintf.c: fix typo
2003-01-07 Jeff Johnston <jjohnstn@redhat.com>
* configure.host: Support long double I/O for x86-linux.

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@ -18,13 +18,13 @@
/*
FUNCTION
<<printf>>, <<fprintf>>, <<saprintf>>, <<sprintf>>, <<snprintf>>---format output
<<printf>>, <<fprintf>>, <<asprintf>>, <<sprintf>>, <<snprintf>>---format output
INDEX
fprintf
INDEX
printf
INDEX
saprintf
asprintf
INDEX
sprintf
INDEX
@ -36,7 +36,7 @@ ANSI_SYNOPSIS
int printf(const char *<[format]> [, <[arg]>, ...]);
int fprintf(FILE *<[fd]>, const char *<[format]> [, <[arg]>, ...]);
int sprintf(char *<[str]>, const char *<[format]> [, <[arg]>, ...]);
int saprintf(char **<[strp]>, const char *<[format]> [, <[arg]>, ...]);
int asprintf(char **<[strp]>, const char *<[format]> [, <[arg]>, ...]);
int snprintf(char *<[str]>, size_t <[size]>, const char *<[format]> [, <[arg]>, ...]);
TRAD_SYNOPSIS
@ -49,7 +49,7 @@ TRAD_SYNOPSIS
FILE *<[fd]>;
char *<[format]>;
int saprintf(<[strp]>, <[format]> [, <[arg]>, ...]);
int asprintf(<[strp]>, <[format]> [, <[arg]>, ...]);
char **<[strp]>;
char *<[format]>;
@ -72,16 +72,16 @@ DESCRIPTION
If there are more arguments than the format requires, excess
arguments are ignored.
<<fprintf>>, <<saprintf>>, <<sprintf>> and <<snprintf>> are identical
<<fprintf>>, <<asprintf>>, <<sprintf>> and <<snprintf>> are identical
to <<printf>>, other than the destination of the formatted output:
<<fprintf>> sends the output to a specified file <[fd]>, while
<<saprintf>> stores the output in a dynamically allocated buffer,
<<asprintf>> stores the output in a dynamically allocated buffer,
while <<sprintf>> stores the output in the specified char array
<[str]> and <<snprintf>> limits number of characters written to
<[str]> to at most <[size]> (including terminating <<0>>). For
<<sprintf>> and <<snprintf>>, the behavior is undefined if the
output <<*<[str]>>> overlaps with one of the arguments. For
<<saprintf>>, <[strp]> points to a pointer to char which is filled
<<asprintf>>, <[strp]> points to a pointer to char which is filled
in with the dynamically allocated buffer. <[format]> is a pointer
to a charater string containing two types of objects: ordinary
characters (other than <<%>>), which are copied unchanged to the
@ -282,11 +282,11 @@ O-
RETURNS
<<sprintf>> and <<saprintf>> return the number of bytes in the output string,
<<sprintf>> and <<asprintf>> return the number of bytes in the output string,
save that the concluding <<NULL>> is not counted.
<<printf>> and <<fprintf>> return the number of characters transmitted.
If an error occurs, <<printf>> and <<fprintf>> return <<EOF>> and
<<saprintf>> returns -1. No error returns occur for <<sprintf>>.
<<asprintf>> returns -1. No error returns occur for <<sprintf>>.
PORTABILITY
The ANSI C standard specifies that implementations must

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@ -91,7 +91,7 @@ TRAD_SYNOPSIS
DESCRIPTION
<<vprintf>>, <<vfprintf>>, <<vasprintf>>, <<vsprintf>> and <<vsnprintf>> are
(respectively) variants of <<printf>>, <<fprintf>>, <<saprintf>>, <<sprintf>>,
(respectively) variants of <<printf>>, <<fprintf>>, <<asprintf>>, <<sprintf>>,
and <<snprintf>>. They differ only in allowing their caller to pass the
variable argument list as a <<va_list>> object (initialized by <<va_start>>)
rather than directly accepting a variable number of arguments.