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1004 lines
43 KiB
1004 lines
43 KiB
# printj
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Extended `sprintf` implementation (for the browser and nodejs). Emphasis on
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compliance, performance and IE6+ support.
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```js
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PRINTJ.sprintf("Hello %s!", "World");
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```
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A self-contained specification of the printf format string is included below in [this README](#printf-format-string-specification), as well as a summary of the
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[support against various printf implementations](#support-summary)
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## Installation
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With [npm](https://www.npmjs.org/package/printj):
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```bash
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$ npm install printj
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```
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In the browser:
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```html
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<script src="printj.js"></script>
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```
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The browser exposes a variable `PRINTJ`
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When installed globally, npm installs a script `printj` that renders the format
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string with the given arguments. Running the script with `-h` displays help.
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The script will manipulate `module.exports` if available (e.g. in a CommonJS
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`require` context). This is not always desirable. To prevent the behavior,
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define `DO_NOT_EXPORT_PRINTJ`
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## Usage
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In all cases, the relevant function takes a format and arguments to be rendered.
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The return value is a JS string.
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- `PRINTJ.sprintf(format, ...args)` assumes the arguments are passed directly
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- `PRINTJ.vsprintf(format, argv)` assumes the arguments are passed in an array
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For example:
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```js
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> // var PRINTJ = require('printj'); // uncomment this line if in node
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> var sprintf = PRINTJ.sprintf, vsprintf = PRINTJ.vsprintf;
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> sprintf("Hello %s", "SheetJS") // 'Hello SheetJS'
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> sprintf("%d + %d = %d", 2,3,2+3) // '2 + 3 = 5'
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> vsprintf("%d + %d = %d", [2,3,5]) // '2 + 3 = 5'
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> sprintf("%1$02hhx %1$u %1$i %1$o", -69) // 'bb 4294967227 -69 37777777673'
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```
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The command line script takes a format and arguments:
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```
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usage: printj [options] <format> [args...]
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Options:
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-h, --help output usage information
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-d, --dump print debug information about format string
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Arguments are treated as strings unless prefaced by a type indicator:
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n:<integer> call parseInt (ex. n:3 -> 3)
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f:<float> call parseFloat (ex. f:3.1 -> 3.1)
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b:<boolean> false when lowercase value is "FALSE" or "0", else true
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s:<string> interpret as string (ex. s:n:3 -> "n:3")
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j:<JSON> interpret as an object using JSON.parse
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e:<JS> evaluate argument (ex. e:1+1 -> 2, e:"1"+1 -> "11")
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samples:
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$ printj '|%02hhx%d|' n:50 e:0x7B # |32123|
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$ printj '|%2$d + %3$d is %1$d|' e:1+2 n:1 n:2 # |1 + 2 is 3|
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$ printj '|%s is %s|' s:1+2 e:1+2 # |1+2 is 3|
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$ printj '|%c %c|' s:69 n:69 # |6 E|
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```
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## Testing
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`make test` will run the nodejs-based test.
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`make stress` will run a larger test encompassing every possible conversion. It
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requires access to a C compiler.
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## License
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Please consult the attached LICENSE file for details. All rights not explicitly
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granted by the Apache 2.0 license are reserved by the Original Author.
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## Badges
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[![Build Status](https://saucelabs.com/browser-matrix/printj.svg)](https://saucelabs.com/u/printj)
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[![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/SheetJS/printj.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/SheetJS/printj)
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[![Coverage Status](http://img.shields.io/coveralls/SheetJS/printj/master.svg)](https://coveralls.io/r/SheetJS/printj?branch=master)
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[![NPM Downloads](https://img.shields.io/npm/dt/printj.svg)](https://npmjs.org/package/printj)
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[![Dependencies Status](https://david-dm.org/sheetjs/printj/status.svg)](https://david-dm.org/sheetjs/printj)
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[![ghit.me](https://ghit.me/badge.svg?repo=sheetjs/printj)](https://ghit.me/repo/sheetjs/printj)
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[![Analytics](https://ga-beacon.appspot.com/UA-36810333-1/SheetJS/printj?pixel)](https://github.com/SheetJS/printj)
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# printf format string specification
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The `printf` family of functions attempt to generate and output a string of
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characters from a series of arguments, following a user-supplied "format string"
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specification. The format string contains normal characters that are written to
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the output string as well as specifiers that describe which parameter to insert
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and how to render the parameter. This specification describes how a conformant
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implementation should process the format string and generate an output string.
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Any discrepancies between this document and the reference implementation are
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considered bugs in the implementation.
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### Original C Interface
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Every function in the `printf` family follows the same logic to generate strings
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but have different interfaces reflecting different input and output behaviors.
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Some functions have wide variants that use wide `wchar_t *` strings rather than
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normal C `char *`. The following variants are required by the POSIX spec:
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| function | max length | output destination | vintage | wide ver |
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|------------|------------|-----------------------|---------|------------|
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| `printf` | unbounded | standard output | K&R | `wprintf` |
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| `fprintf` | unbounded | stream (`FILE *`) | K&R | `fwprintf` |
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| `sprintf` | unbounded | string (`char *`) | K&R | `swprintf` |
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| `snprintf` | parameter | string (`char *`) | C99 | |
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| `dprintf` | unbounded | POSIX file descriptor | POSIX | |
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Each function has a dual function, whose name begins with `v`, that accepts the
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parameters as a `va_list` rather than formal parameters. In all cases, they
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return the number of characters written or a negative value to indicate error:
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```C
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int sprintf(char *ostr, const char *fmt, ...);
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int vsprintf(char *ostr, const char *fmt, va_list arg_list);
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int swprintf(wchar_t *ostr, const wchar_t *fmt, ...);
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int vswprintf(wchar_t *ostr, const wchar_t *fmt, va_list arg_list);
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```
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### JS and C strings
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C "strings" are really just arrays of numbers. An external code page (such as
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ASCII) maps those numbers to characters. K&R defines two types of strings:
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basic character set strings (`char *`) and extended character set strings
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(`wchar_t *`). In contrast, JS has a true string value type.
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Unlike in C, JS strings do not treat the null character as an end-of-string
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marker. As a result, characters beyond the first null character will be used.
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The JS equivalent of a C extended string would be an array of the individual
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character codes. The C basic string equivalent would involve specifying a code
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page and mapping back. The `codepage` JS library supports common codepages.
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While capturing the essence of C strings, using arrays of character codes is not
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idiomatic JS. Few developers leverage this and the downsides far exceed the
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benefits of a more direct translation. The effect can be feigned, as shown in
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the `js2c` code sample at the end of the document.
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### JS Interface
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In the absence of a standard output or even a standard concept of a stream, the
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non-string outputs are irrelevant. Similarly there is no JS analogue of wide
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characters. While useful, lack of direct memory management obviates `snprintf`.
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This implementation exports the remaining functions, `sprintf` and `vsprintf`.
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Instead of replicating the original C signature and `errno`, functions directly
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return the output string and throw Errors:
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```typescript
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function sprintf(fmt:string, ...args):string;
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function vsprintf(fmt:string, args:Array<any>):string;
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```
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The C functions return the number of characters written to the string, which is
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directly accessible in JS via the `length` property. A direct replica of the
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various string functions are included at the end of the document.
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## Specifier heritage and regular expression
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Note: The regular expressions follow perl `/x` style. Whitespace characters
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outside of character classes are ignored. `#` is a comment character and every
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character until the end of the line is ignored. To convert to a standard regex:
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```js
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regex_string.replace(/#.*$/gm,"").replace(/^\s*/gm,"").replace(/\s*\n/gm,"");
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```
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Based on K&R, conversions originally followed the format:
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- required: leading `%`
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- optional: `-` (POSIX refers to this as the "flags")
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- optional: positive number or `*` (POSIX "width")
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- optional: period followed by positive number or `*` (POSIX "precision")
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- optional: an `h` or `l` to indicate size of data (POSIX "length")
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- required: character describing output behavior (POSIX "conversion specifier")
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This is captured by the regular expression:
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```perl
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/%(?:
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([-])? # flags (only minus sign)
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(\d+|\*)? # width
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(?:\.(\d+|\*))? # period + precision
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([hl])? # length
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([dioxXucsfeEgGp%]) # conversion specifier
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)/x
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```
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Various implementations of `printf` have added different functionality.
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ANSI standards up through C99:
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- more flags `"+"` `" "` `"0"` `"#"`
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- more lengths `"L"` `"hh"` `"ll"` `"j"` `"z"` `"t"`
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- more conversions `"F"` `"a"` `"A"` `"n"`
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The POSIX specification of `printf` added:
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- positional parameters to identify argument indices
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- more flags `"'"`
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- more conversions `"C"` `"S"`
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- clarifications regarding corner cases and "undefined behavior"
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BSD implementations added:
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- more lengths `"q"`
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- more conversions `"D"` `"U"` `"O"`
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glibc (GNU) added:
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- more lengths `"Z"`
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- more conversions `"m"`
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Windows C Runtime (CRT) added:
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- more lengths `"I"` `"I32"` `"I64"` `"w"`
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glibc and CRT both added `Z`. glibc uses `Z` for the length `size_t`. CRT uses
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`Z` as a conversion for length-prefixed strings. This implementation takes the
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former approach, handling `Z` in the same way as `z`.
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BSD and IBM C library both added `D`. BSD uses `D` as a conversion, namely as
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an alias of `ld`. IBM uses `D` for the length for `_Decimal64`, a decimal
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floating point type, in accordance with ISO/IEC TR 24732. This implementation
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takes the former approach.
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This implementation also adds new conversions:
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- `"b"` and `"B"` for binary (base-2) integer renderings
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- `"y"` and `"Y"` for true/false and yes/no Boolean conversions
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- `"J"` for JSON
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- `"T"` and `"V"` for JS typeof and valueOf inspection
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Combining the various extensions yields the following regular expression:
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```perl
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/%(?:
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%| # literal %% (flags etc prohibited)
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([1-9]\d*\$)? # positional parameter
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([-+ 0\x23\x27]*)? # flags
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([1-9]\d*|\*(?:[1-9]\d*\$)?)? # width
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(?:\.(\d+|\*(?:[1-9]\d*\$)?))? # precision
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(hh?|ll?|[LzjtqZIw])? # length
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([diouxXfFeEgGaAcCsSpnDUOmbByYJVT]) # conversion specifier
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)/x
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```
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This implementation explicitly does not support certain non-standard extensions:
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- AltiVec vector length extensions (`v` with `h`/`l`/`ll`):
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- CRT fixed width lengths `I32` and `I64`
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## Conversion Specifier Quick Reference Table
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| C | Type | Summary |
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|-----|:--------:|-------------------------------------------------------------|
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| `a` | floating | base-2 exp form w/ hex mantissa and dec exponent, lowercase |
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| `A` | floating | base-2 exp form w/ hex mantissa and dec exponent, uppercase |
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| `b` | extended | cast to C `unsigned int`, standard form binary |
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| `B` | extended | cast to C `unsigned long`, standard form binary |
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| `c` | text | print `latin-1` char from number OR first char of string |
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| `C` | text | print `UCS-2` char from number OR first char of string |
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| `d` | integral | cast to C `int`, standard form decimal |
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| `D` | integral | cast to C `long`, standard form decimal |
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| `e` | floating | base-10 exp form w/dec mantissa and dec exponent, lowercase |
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| `E` | floating | base-10 exp form w/dec mantissa and dec exponent, uppercase |
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| `f` | floating | base-10 decimal form, lowercase extended values |
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| `F` | floating | base-10 decimal form, uppercase extended values |
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| `g` | floating | print using `e` or `f` conversion based on value/precision |
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| `G` | floating | print using `E` or `F` conversion based on value/precision |
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| `i` | integral | cast to C `int`, standard form decimal (alias of `d`) |
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| `J` | extended | prints objects using JSON or `util.inspect` |
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| `m` | misc | prints info about Error objects (JS equivalent of `errno`) |
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| `n` | misc | do not print! stores number of chars written to arg `.len` |
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| `o` | integral | cast to C `unsigned int`, standard form octal |
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| `O` | integral | cast to C `unsigned long`, standard form octal |
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| `p` | misc | print `"l"` field of object (fake pointer) |
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| `s` | text | print string argument |
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| `S` | text | print string argument (alias of `"s"`) |
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| `T` | extended | print type information (`typeof` or `Object toString`) |
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| `u` | integral | cast to C `unsigned int`, standard form decimal |
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| `U` | integral | cast to C `unsigned long`, standard form decimal |
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| `V` | extended | print primitive value (`valueOf`) |
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| `x` | integral | cast to C `unsigned int`, standard form hex, lowercase |
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| `X` | integral | cast to C `unsigned long`, standard form hex, uppercase |
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| `y` | extended | prints `true`/`false` or `yes`/`no` based on Boolean value |
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| `Y` | extended | prints `TRUE`/`FALSE` or `YES`/`NO` based on Boolean value |
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| `%` | misc | print the literal `%` character |
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## Parameter Selection
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The default behavior is to consume arguments in order:
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```C
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printf("Count to 3: %d %d %d", 1, 2, 3); // Count to 3: 1 2 3
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```
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POSIX `printf` permits explicit argument selection, bypassing the standard
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behavior of using the arguments in order. To select the `n`-th argument, use
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`n$` immediately after the `%` token to select an argument for the conversion:
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```C
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printf("%d %d %d", 1, 2, 3); // 1 2 3 (implicit order 1, 2, 3 )
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printf("%1$s %2$s %3$s", "a", "b", "c"); // a b c (explicit order 1, 2, 3 )
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printf("%1$s %3$s %2$s", "a", "b", "c"); // a c b (explicit order 1, 3, 2 )
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```
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The POSIX standard asserts that mixing positional and non-positional conversions
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is undefined behavior. This implementation handles mixing by tracking the index
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for non-positional conversions:
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```C
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printf("%s %4$s %s %5$s %s", "a", "b", "c", "d", "e"); // a d b e c
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```
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The POSIX standard requires that if an argument is used in the format, every
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preceding argument must be used. This implementation relaxes that requirement:
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```C
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printf("%3$s", "a", "b", "c"); // c (technically invalid since "a"/"b" unused)
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```
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## Dynamic Specifiers
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The width and precision specifiers may include the dynamic specifier `*` which
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instructs the engine to read the next argument (assumed to be an integer). Just
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as with the positional parameter, `idx$` immediately after the `*` token selects
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the numeric argument.
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For example:
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```C
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printf("|%5s|", "sheetjs"); // |sheetjs| (width = 5)
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printf("|%*s|", 5, "sheetjs"); // |sheetjs| (width first argument)
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printf("|%2$*1$s|", 5, "sheetjs", 10); // |sheetjs| (width is argument #1)
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printf("|%10s|", "sheetjs"); // | sheetjs| (width = 10)
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printf("|%2$*3$s|", 5, "sheetjs", 10); // | sheetjs| (width is argument #3)
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```
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Arguments are generally consumed in order as presented in the format string:
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```C
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printf("|%s|", val);
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printf("|%*s|", width, val);
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printf("|%.*s|", prec, val);
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printf("|%*.*s|", width, prec, val);
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printf("|%0*.*d|", 4, 2, 1); // | 01| width=4 prec=2 value=1
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```
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Positional arguments can be applied to width and precision:
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```C
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printf("|%*.*d|", width, prec, val);
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printf("|%2$0*3$.*1$d|", prec, val, width);
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printf("|%0*.*d|", 4, 2, 1); // | 01| width=4 prec=2 value=1 flags='0'
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printf("|%1$0*3$.*2$d|", 1, 2, 4); // | 01| width=4 prec=2 value=1 flags='0'
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```
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A negative width is interpreted as the `-` flag with a positive width:
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```C
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printf("|%*.*d|", 4, 2, 1); // | 01| width=4 prec=2 value=1 flags=''
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printf("|%-*.*d|", 4, 2, 1); // |01 | width=4 prec=2 value=1 flags='-'
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printf("|%*.*d|", -4, 2, 1); // |01 | width=4 prec=2 value=1 flags='-'
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printf("|%-*.*d|", -4, 2, 1); // |01 | width=4 prec=2 value=1 flags='-'
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```
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A negative precision is discarded:
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```C
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printf("|%*s|", 4, "sheetjs"); // |sheetjs| width=4
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printf("|%*.*s|", 4, 3, "sheetjs"); // | she| width=4 prec=3
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printf("|%*.*s|", 4, 2, "sheetjs"); // | sh| width=4 prec=2
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printf("|%*.*s|", 4, 1, "sheetjs"); // | s| width=4 prec=1
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printf("|%*.*s|", 4, 0, "sheetjs"); // | | width=4 prec=0
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printf("|%*.*s|", 4, -1, "sheetjs"); // |sheetjs| width=4 (prec ignored)
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```
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# C Data Model
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JS has one numeric type `Number` which represents an IEEE754 double-precision
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(64-bit) floating point number. C has a multitude of numeric types, including
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floating point as well as integer types. The sizes of those data types are
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implementation-dependent. A "C data model" specifies the sizes of the core C
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data types.
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### Integer Types
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POSIX `printf` specification references 8 integer types in integer conversions:
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| C data type | fmt | unsigned type | fmt | signed type | fmt |
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|-------------|------:|----------------------|------:|---------------|------:|
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| `char` | | `unsigned char` | `hhu` | `signed char` | `hhd` |
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| `short` | `hd` | `unsigned short` | `hu` | | |
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| `int` | `d` | `unsigned int` | `u` | | |
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| `long` | `ld` | `unsigned long` | `lu` | | |
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| `long long` | `lld` | `unsigned long long` | `llu` | | |
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| `size_t` | `zu` | | | `ssize_t` | `zd` |
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| `intmax_t` | `jd` | `uintmax_t` | `ju` | | |
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| `ptrdiff_t` | `td` | | | | |
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C99 does not officially define a signed `size_t` or unsigned `ptrdiff_t` type.
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POSIX does define `ssize_t` but no equivalent `uptrdiff_t`.
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|
BSD additionally recognizes the types `quad_t` and `u_quad_t`, which this
|
|
implementation treats as `long long int` and `unsigned long long int`.
|
|
|
|
### Character and String Types
|
|
|
|
Two integer types are used in character and string conversions:
|
|
|
|
| type | fmt |
|
|
|-------------|------:|
|
|
| `wchar_t` | `ls` |
|
|
| `wint_t` | `lc` |
|
|
|
|
Both wide types `wchar_t` and `wint_t` can be signed or unsigned according to
|
|
C99. Both types are used only in character and string conversions. Based on
|
|
K&R "printable characters are always positive", the types are assumed unsigned.
|
|
|
|
### Floating Point Number Types
|
|
|
|
K&R recognizes 3 floating point types. C99 later tied it to IEC 60559:
|
|
|
|
| C data type | precision | total bits | exponent | mantissa | fmt |
|
|
|:--------------|:----------|:----------:|:--------:|:--------:|------:|
|
|
| `float` | single | `32` | `8` | `23` | |
|
|
| `double` | double | `64` | `11` | `52` | `f` |
|
|
| `long double` | extended | `80` | `15` | `64` | `Lf` |
|
|
|
|
## Implementation
|
|
|
|
Numerous "C data models", specifying the bit/byte sizes of the various types,
|
|
have been and continue to be used. For example, OSX and other modern 64-bit
|
|
UNIX flavors use the "LP64" C data model. 64-bit Windows currently uses the
|
|
"LLP64" model. 32-bit systems generally use the "ILP32" model. The 8-bit byte
|
|
sizes for the various types under the various models are defined in ctypes.json
|
|
in the `Models` object as per the following table:
|
|
|
|
| type | ctypes.json | LP64 | ILP32 | LLP64 |
|
|
|-------------|-------------|-----:|------:|------:|
|
|
| `char` | `char` | 1 | 1 | 1 |
|
|
| `short` | `short` | 2 | 2 | 2 |
|
|
| `int` | `int` | 4 | 4 | 4 |
|
|
| `long` | `long` | 8 | 4 | 4 |
|
|
| `long long` | `longlong` | 8 | 8 | 8 |
|
|
| `wchar_t` | `wchar_t` | 4 | 4 | 2 |
|
|
| `wint_t` | `wint_t` | 4 | 4 | 2 |
|
|
| `size_t` | `size_t` | 8 | 4 | 8 |
|
|
| `intmax_t` | `intmax_t` | 8 | 8 | 8 |
|
|
| `ptrdiff_t` | `ptrdiff_t` | 8 | 4 | 8 |
|
|
|
|
By default the source assumes the LP64 data model. Other data models are
|
|
supported in the source tree, controlled by the JSFLAGS variable in the build
|
|
process. Set the `JS_MODEL` variable to the desired index as specified in the
|
|
`ModelNames` array in `bits/ctype.json`:
|
|
|
|
```bash
|
|
$ <bits/ctypes.json jq -r '.ModelNames|.[]' # LP64 ILP32 LLP64
|
|
$ JSFLAGS=-DJS_MODEL=0 make # LP64
|
|
$ JSFLAGS=-DJS_MODEL=1 make # ILP32
|
|
$ JSFLAGS=-DJS_MODEL=2 make # LLP64
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
To create a custom model, add the spec to `bits/ctypes.json` by appending the
|
|
model name to the end of the `ModelNames` array and adding an entry to the
|
|
`Models` object. The current models are defined as follows:
|
|
|
|
```json
|
|
{
|
|
"ModelNames":["LP64", "ILP32", "LLP64"],
|
|
"Models": {
|
|
"LP64": { "char":1, "short":2, "int":4, "long":8, "longlong":8, "wint_t":4, "wchar_t":4, "size_t":8, "intmax_t":8, "ptrdiff_t":8 },
|
|
"ILP32": { "char":1, "short":2, "int":4, "long":4, "longlong":8, "wint_t":4, "wchar_t":4, "size_t":4, "intmax_t":8, "ptrdiff_t":4 },
|
|
"LLP64": { "char":1, "short":2, "int":4, "long":4, "longlong":8, "wint_t":2, "wchar_t":2, "size_t":8, "intmax_t":8, "ptrdiff_t":8 }
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
# Integer Conversions
|
|
|
|
This section covers the conversions `diouxXDUO`. The base-2 conversions `bB`
|
|
are an extension and are discussed at the end, but the same basic rules apply.
|
|
|
|
JS has one Number type (representing an IEEE754 8-byte floating point number)
|
|
that is capable of representing a 32-bit integer. It cannot represent the full
|
|
range of 64-bit integers exactly. Care is taken to avoid operations that may
|
|
inadvertently result in a conversion to a smaller integral type.
|
|
|
|
## Restricting Integer Values
|
|
|
|
JS Bitwise operations convert numbers to 32-bit integers before performing
|
|
operations. With the exception of the unsigned right shift operator `>>>`, all
|
|
operations act on signed integers. For example:
|
|
|
|
```js
|
|
Math.pow(2,31) | 0; // -2147483648 == -Math.pow(2,31)
|
|
(Math.pow(2,32)-2) ^ 0; // -2
|
|
-1 >>> 0 // 4294967295 == Math.pow(2,32) - 1
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
JS Number can exactly represent every integer in the range `-2^53 .. 2^53`. For
|
|
lengths exceeding 32 bits, `Math.round` is appropriate.
|
|
|
|
| bits | unsigned | signed |
|
|
|------|---------------------------|-------------------------------------------|
|
|
| 8 | `V & 0xFF` | `V &= 0xFF; if(V > 0x7F) V-= 0x100` |
|
|
| 16 | `V & 0xFFFF` | `V &= 0xFFFF; if(V > 0x7FFF) V-= 0x10000` |
|
|
| 32 | `V >>> 0` | `V | 0` |
|
|
| 64 | `Math.abs(Math.round(V))` | `Math.round(V)` |
|
|
|
|
## Length Specifiers for Integer Conversions
|
|
|
|
When a length specifier implies a certain size (such as `hh` for a single-byte
|
|
integer), the number will be converted before rendering strings. For example:
|
|
|
|
```C
|
|
printf("%1$02hhx %1$02hx %1$02lx %1$02llx", 256); // |00 100 100 100|
|
|
printf("%1$02hhx %1$02hx %1$02lx %1$02llx", 4096); // |00 1000 1000 1000|
|
|
printf("%1$02hhx %1$02hx %1$02lx %1$02llx", 65536); // |00 00 10000 10000|
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
Values are restricted by first limiting the result to a specified number of
|
|
bytes (appropriate bit-and) and then adding or subtracting to ensure the value
|
|
is signed or unsigned according to the conversion specifier. If a length is
|
|
specified, it overrides the implied length of the conversion. The following
|
|
table describes the behavior of this implementation:
|
|
|
|
| implied C type | ctypes.json | length | conv default |
|
|
|:------------------------------------|:------------|:------:|:-------------|
|
|
| `int` or `unsigned int` | `int` | (none) | d i o u x X |
|
|
| `char` or `unsigned char` | `char` | hh |
|
|
| `short` or `unsigned short` | `short` | h |
|
|
| `long` or `unsigned long` | `long` | l | D U O |
|
|
| `long long` or `unsigned long long` | `longlong` | L ll q |
|
|
| `intmax_t` or `uintmax_t` | `intmax_t` | j |
|
|
| `size_t` or `ssize_t` | `size_t` | z Z |
|
|
| `ptrdiff_t` or unsigned variant | `ptrdiff_t` | t |
|
|
|
|
## Rendering Unsigned Integers in Base 10 ("u" and "U" conversions)
|
|
|
|
`num.toString(10)` produces the correct result for exact integers.
|
|
|
|
`"u"` conversion restricts values to `int`; `"U"` restricts to `long`.
|
|
|
|
## Rendering Unsigned Integers in Base 8 ("o" and "O" conversions)
|
|
|
|
Even though `num.toString(8)` is implementation-dependent, all browser
|
|
implementations use standard form for integers in the exact range.
|
|
|
|
The alternate form (`#`) prints a `"0"` prefix.
|
|
|
|
`"o"` conversion restricts values to `int`; `"O"` restricts to `long`.
|
|
|
|
## Rendering Unsigned Integers in Base 16 ("x" and "X" conversions)
|
|
|
|
Even though `num.toString(16)` is implementation-dependent, all browser
|
|
implementations use standard form for integers in the exact range.
|
|
|
|
The alternate form (`#`) prints a `"0x"` or `"0X"` prefix.
|
|
|
|
Unlike `"U" "O" "D"`, `"X"` conversion uses `A-F` instead of `a-f` in hex.
|
|
|
|
## Rendering Signed Integers in Base 10 ("d" "i" and "D" conversions)
|
|
|
|
`num.toString(10)` produces the correct result for exact integers. The flags
|
|
`" +"` control prefixes for positive integers.
|
|
|
|
`"di"` conversions restrict values to `int`; `"D"` restricts to `long`.
|
|
|
|
|
|
# Floating Point Conversions
|
|
|
|
This section covers the conversions `fFeEgGaA`.
|
|
|
|
Due to C variadic argument promotion rules, `float` types are always promoted to
|
|
`double`. None of the conversions or length specifiers signal that an argument
|
|
is to be interpreted as a `float`. There is no JS canonical representation of
|
|
an extended floating point number, so JS `Number` suffices.
|
|
|
|
## Infinity, NaN, and Negative Zero
|
|
|
|
JS recognizes a few special IEEE754 values, as described in the following table:
|
|
|
|
| JS value | JS Expression | Description |
|
|
|------------:|:--------------|:-----------------------------------------------|
|
|
| `Infinity` | `1./0.` | Positive limiting value `lim{x->0+} 1/x` |
|
|
| `-Infinity` | `-1./0.` | Negative limiting value `lim{x->0+} -1/x` |
|
|
| `NaN` | `0./0.` | Placeholder for "not-a-number" e.g. `0./0.` |
|
|
| `-0.` | `-1/Infinity` | Negative limiting value `lim{x->0-} x` |
|
|
|
|
JS `Number` methods render different strings from the POSIX spec:
|
|
|
|
| JS value | POSIX string | JS string |
|
|
|------------:|:----------------------------------------------|--------------:|
|
|
| `Infinity` | `"inf" "INF"` or `"infinity" "INFINITY"` | `"Infinity"` |
|
|
| `-Infinity` | `"-inf" "-INF"` or `"-infinity" "-INFINITY"` | `"-Infinity"` |
|
|
| `NaN` | `"[-]nan" "[-]NAN"` w/opt parenthesized chars | `"NaN"` |
|
|
| `-0.` | uses negative sign (e.g. `"-0"` under `"%f"`) | same as `+0.` |
|
|
|
|
This implementation performs the required adjustments.
|
|
|
|
## Exponential Form ("e" and "E" conversions)
|
|
|
|
Aside from the special cases discussed above, JS `num.toExponential(prec)`
|
|
differs from POSIX `printf("%1$.*2$e", num, prec)` in the exponent field: JS
|
|
writes exponents with the fewest digits (POSIX requires 2+ digits). This is
|
|
easily fixed by inspecting the output string and inserting a "0" when needed.
|
|
|
|
The optional `#` flag forces the decimal point to appear when precision is 0.
|
|
This is also easily corrected by adding a decimal point just before the "e".
|
|
|
|
## Standard Form ("f" and "F" conversions)
|
|
|
|
The POSIX spec only requires that the number of digits after the decimal point
|
|
is equal to the precision. It does not specify how many digits appear before
|
|
the decimal point, nor does it specify how to handle numbers that cannot be
|
|
exactly represented.
|
|
|
|
For values less than `1e21` the JS `num.toFixed(n)` generally matches `%f` with
|
|
the specified precision. However, for larger values `toFixed` defaults to the
|
|
exponential form.
|
|
|
|
## Value-dependent Form ("g" and "G" conversions)
|
|
|
|
The final form (exponential or standard) is determined based on the value. The
|
|
threshold is different from the JS `toString` / `toPrecision` thresholds and
|
|
depends on the specified precision as well as the base-10 exponent:
|
|
|
|
| Value | `"%.3g"` | `toPrecision(3)` |
|
|
|----------:|:-----------|:-----------------|
|
|
| 1.2345e-4 | `0.000123` | `0.000123` |
|
|
| 1.2345e-5 | `1.23e-05` | `0.0000123` |
|
|
| 1.2345e-6 | `1.23e-06` | `0.00000123` |
|
|
| 1.2345e-7 | `1.23e-07` | `1.23e-7` |
|
|
|
|
According to JS spec, `toPrecision` uses standard form when `precision > E` and
|
|
`E >= -6`. For printf standard form is used when `precision > E` and `E >= -4`.
|
|
|
|
## Hex-Mantissa Decimal-Binary-Exponent Form ("a" and "A" conversions)
|
|
|
|
A general exponential form involves 3 parameters: radix of the mantissa, base of
|
|
the exponent expression, and radix of the exponent expression. The standard
|
|
exponential form uses decimal for all three parts. For base 16, there are quite
|
|
a few reasonable combinations. Consider the value `1.234567e-80`:
|
|
|
|
| Mant | Exp Base | Radix-10 (sigil `";"`) | Radix-16 (sigil `";"`) |
|
|
|:----:|:--------:|:-----------------------|:-----------------------|
|
|
| 10 | 10 | `1.234567;-80` | `1.234567;-50` |
|
|
| 16 | 10 | `1.3c0c9539b8887;-80` | `1.3c0c9539b8887;-50` |
|
|
| 16 | 16 | `5.daf8c8f5f4104;-67` | `5.daf8c8f5f4104;-43` |
|
|
| 16 | 4 | `1.76be323d7d041;-133` | `1.76be323d7d041;-85` |
|
|
| 16 | 2 | `1.76be323d7d041;-266` | `1.76be323d7d041;-10a` |
|
|
|
|
POSIX `"%a"` uses a hex mantissa (16), decimal exponent radix (10), and binary
|
|
exponent base (2). The general normalized form requires that the integral part
|
|
of the mantissa to exceed 0 and not to exceed `exponent base - 1` except in the
|
|
special case of `0`. The sigil is `p` and exponent sign is always used.
|
|
|
|
JS `num.toString(radix)` is implementation-dependent for valid non-10 radices
|
|
(`2-9, 11-36`). IE uses hex-mantissa decimal-hex-exponent form when the
|
|
absolute value of the base-2 exponent exceeds 60. Otherwise, IE uses an exact
|
|
standard hexadecimal form. Chrome, Safari and other browsers always use the
|
|
exact standard hexadecimal form. Both forms are easily converted to `"%a"` by
|
|
calculating and dividing by the appropriate power of 2.
|
|
|
|
For each non-zero normal floating point value, there are 4 acceptable strings
|
|
that represent the value, derived by multiplying the normalized value by powers
|
|
of 2 and adjusting the exponent accordingly:
|
|
|
|
| Value | Normalized | Alternate `*2` | Alternate `*4` | Alternate `*8` |
|
|
|:--------|:---------------|:---------------|:---------------|:---------------|
|
|
| `1` | `1p+0` | `2p-1` | `4p-2` | `8p-3` |
|
|
| `.2` | `1.9999999p-3` | `3.3333333p-4` | `6.6666666p-5` | `c.cccccccp-6` |
|
|
| `.69` | `1.6147ae1p-1` | `2.c28f5c2p-2` | `5.851eb85p-3` | `b.0a3d70ap-4` |
|
|
| `6.e20` | `1.043561p+69` | `2.086ac3p+68` | `4.10d586p+67` | `8.21ab0dp+66` |
|
|
|
|
JS engines follow the glibc model: multiply by a suitable power of 16 so that
|
|
the mantissa is between 1 and 16, render left to right one digit at a time, then
|
|
fix the result at the end. FreeBSD and OSX always show the normalized form.
|
|
This implementation defaults to the normalized form. To switch to the glibc
|
|
form, define `DO_NOT_NORMALIZE` in the `JSFLAGS` variable when building:
|
|
|
|
```bash
|
|
$ JSFLAGS=-DDO_NOT_NORMALIZE make
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
# Character Conversions
|
|
|
|
This section covers the conversions `sScC`.
|
|
|
|
## Rendering Strings ("s" and "S" conversions)
|
|
|
|
JS has no concept of "wide strings" (`wchar_t *` in C), so the length modifiers
|
|
are ignored. `s` and `S` are treated as equivalent.
|
|
|
|
Arguments are first interpreted as strings by calling the `String` function.
|
|
Implementing `toString` on the argument to be converted may lead to unexpected
|
|
results:
|
|
|
|
```C
|
|
var O = {valueOf:function() {return 456;}, toString:function() {return "123"}};
|
|
printf("%1$s %1$d", O); // "123 456"
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
If a positive precision is specified, up to that many characters will be taken
|
|
from the string. Otherwise the entire string will be used:
|
|
|
|
```C
|
|
printf("|%s|", "sheetjs"); // '|sheetjs|' (no precision)
|
|
printf("|%.9s|", "sheetjs"); // '|sheetjs|' (string shorter than precision)
|
|
printf("|%.5s|", "sheetjs"); // '|sheet|' (string truncated)
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
Lengths are measured using the JS string length accessor. Since there is no
|
|
attempt to correct for multi-character sequences like combining marks, the
|
|
results may be unexpected:
|
|
|
|
```C
|
|
printf("%.1s","ñ"); // 'n' not "ñ"
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
If the width is specified and is greater than the width of the string to be
|
|
rendered, padding will be applied. If the `"-"` flag is specified, then the
|
|
string will be right-padded, otherwise it will be left-padded. If the `"0"`
|
|
flag is specified, the final string is left-padded with zeroes. The `"-"` flag
|
|
takes precedence over `0`.
|
|
|
|
```C
|
|
printf( "|%s|", "sheetjs"); // '|sheetjs|' (no width)
|
|
printf( "|%5s|", "sheetjs"); // '|sheetjs|' (string longer than width)
|
|
printf( "|%9s|", "sheetjs"); // '| sheetjs|' (no flag = left pad spaces)
|
|
printf( "|%09s|", "sheetjs"); // '|00sheetjs|' ("0" = left pad "0")
|
|
printf( "|%-9s|", "sheetjs"); // '|sheetjs |' ("-" = right pad space)
|
|
printf("|%-09s|", "sheetjs"); // '|sheetjs |' ("0" ignored)
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
## Rendering Characters ("c" and "C" conversions)
|
|
|
|
JS has no concept of "wide characters" (`wchar_t` in C). The length modifier is
|
|
used in determining whether the number should be interpreted as one or two
|
|
16-bit character codes (when the "C" format or the "l" or "ll" specifiers are
|
|
used) or a single 8-bit char code. Precision and flags are ignored.
|
|
|
|
# Non-Numeric Conversions
|
|
|
|
## The literal "%" symbol ("%" conversion)
|
|
|
|
All other parameters are ignored.
|
|
|
|
## Interpreting and Rendering Pointers ("p" conversion)
|
|
|
|
JS has no true concept of pointers. In array and typed array contexts, it is
|
|
common to associate a position object that stores the address relative to the
|
|
start of the array. This implementation reads the `l` key and interprets as a
|
|
32-bit or 52-bit unsigned integer depending on `size_t` in the data model.
|
|
|
|
The normal output format is equivalent to `"%#x"` but the alternate form emits
|
|
using the `"%d"` format. When the pointer is invalid, `-1` is rendered. Only
|
|
the `"#"` flag is interpreted.
|
|
|
|
```js
|
|
var x = {}, y = {l:3};
|
|
printf("%1$p %1$#p", y); // 0x3 3
|
|
printf("%1$p %1$#p", x); // 0xFFFFFFFF -1
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
## Extracting length of a partial conversion ("n" conversion)
|
|
|
|
C `printf` permits a special `n` conversion which interprets the argument as an
|
|
integral pointer (interpreted size controlled by the length specifier) and
|
|
writes the number of characters printed to that pointer.
|
|
|
|
JS has no true concept of pointers in the C sense. The library works around
|
|
the limitation by interpreting the argument as an object and assigning to the
|
|
`len` key. The conversion does not write any characters to the output string:
|
|
|
|
```js
|
|
var x = {};
|
|
printf("%1$s %2$J%2$n abc", "foo", x); // "foo {} abc", also sets x.len = 6
|
|
// |........| |......| (6 chars at that point)
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
This implementation mutates the object while processing:
|
|
|
|
```js
|
|
var x = {};
|
|
printf("%1$s %2$J%2$n %3$s %2$J", "foo", x, "bar"); // 'foo {} bar {"len":6}'
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
## Error messages ("m" conversion)
|
|
|
|
glibc supports an `m` conversion that does not consume arguments. It renders
|
|
the string `strerror(errno)` where `strerror` is the libc function and `errno`
|
|
is the global error number.
|
|
|
|
JS has no equivalent of `errno` and no standard JS runtime exposes a similar
|
|
global error variable, so `%m` will write the default message `"Success"`. A
|
|
positional parameter or `#` flag changes the behavior:
|
|
|
|
| form | position | behavior |
|
|
|:------------:|:--------:|---------------------------------------|
|
|
| main | no | do not read argument, emit "Success" |
|
|
| alt (flag #) | no | read and process next argument |
|
|
| main or alt | yes | read and process specified argument |
|
|
|
|
In all forms other than `"%m"`, an argument will be processed as follows:
|
|
|
|
- If the argument is not an instance of an `Error`, emit "Success"
|
|
- If the `message` field is set, emit the error message.
|
|
- If the `errno` field is set, emit "Error number " followed by the errno
|
|
- Otherwise emit "Error " followed by the error interpreted as a String
|
|
|
|
```
|
|
var x = new Error("sheetjs");
|
|
x.errno = 69; x.toString = function() { return "SHEETJS"; };
|
|
printf("|%#m|", x); // |sheetjs|
|
|
delete x.message;
|
|
printf("|%#m|", x); // |Error number 69|
|
|
delete x.errno;
|
|
printf("|%#m|", x); // |Error SHEETJS|
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
# Extensions
|
|
|
|
These additional conversions take advantage of unused format characters:
|
|
|
|
## Rendering Boolean Values ("y" and "Y" conversions)
|
|
|
|
Values are converted to Boolean and tested for truthiness. The `Y` rendering
|
|
is the uppercase version of the equivalent rendering with format `y`.
|
|
|
|
|
|
| form | truthy value `y` (`Y`) | falsy value `y` (`Y`) |
|
|
|:------------:|:-----------------------:|:---------------------:|
|
|
| main | `true` (`TRUE`) | `false` (`FALSE`) |
|
|
| alt (flag #) | `yes` (`YES`) | `no` (`NO`) |
|
|
|
|
Width and precision are applied in the same manner as the `s` conversion.
|
|
|
|
```js
|
|
printf("|%1$y|%2$Y|%1$#Y|%2$#y|%2$.1y|", 1, 0); // |true|FALSE|YES|no|f|
|
|
printf("|%05.2Y|%-5.2y|", 1, 0); // |000TR|fa |
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
## Rendering JSON ("J" conversion)
|
|
|
|
The default rendering is the standard output from `JSON.stringify`. Alternate
|
|
form (`"#"` flag) renders using `util.inspect` if available.
|
|
|
|
```js
|
|
var x = {
|
|
a: [1,[2,3,4],5,6,7],
|
|
b: {
|
|
c: {
|
|
d: { e:"f" },
|
|
g:"h",
|
|
i:"j"
|
|
},
|
|
k:"l",
|
|
m:"n",
|
|
o:"p"},
|
|
q: "r"
|
|
};
|
|
printf("%J", x) // '{"a":[1,[2,3,4],5,6,7],"b":{"c":{"d":{"e":"f"}, ..(ctnd)..
|
|
printf("%#J", x) // '{ a: [ 1, [ 2, 3, 4 ], 5, 6, 7 ],\n b: { c: { ..(ctnd)..
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
Width, precision and other flags are ignored.
|
|
|
|
## JS typeof and valueOf ("T" and "V" conversion)
|
|
|
|
Under the "T" conversion, the result of `typeof arg` is rendered. If the `#`
|
|
flag is specified, the type is derived from `Object.prototype.toString`:
|
|
|
|
```
|
|
printf("%1$T %1$#T", 1); // 'number Number'
|
|
printf("%1$T %1$#T", 'foo'); // 'string String'
|
|
printf("%1$T %1$#T", [1,2,3]); // 'object Array'
|
|
printf("%1$T %1$#T", null); // 'object Null'
|
|
printf("%1$T %1$#T", undefined); // 'undefined Undefined'
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
Under the "V" conversion, the result of `arg.valueOf()` is rendered:
|
|
|
|
```
|
|
var _f = function() { return "f"; };
|
|
var _3 = function() { return 3; };
|
|
printf("%1$d %1$s %1$V", {toString:_f}); // '0 f f'
|
|
printf("%1$d %1$s %1$V", {valueOf:_3}); // '3 [object Object] 3'
|
|
printf("%1$d %1$s %1$V", {valueOf:_3, toString:_f}); // '3 f 3'
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
## Rendering Unsigned Integers in Base 2 ("b" and "B" conversions)
|
|
|
|
The implementation is similar to the octal `"o"` and `"O"` conversions, except
|
|
for the radix (2 for `"b"` and `"B"`) and the alternate-form prefix (`"0b"`)
|
|
|
|
# Miscellaneous Notes
|
|
|
|
## Format Characters
|
|
|
|
For compatibility purposes, format characters must be printable ASCII characters
|
|
(ASCII codes `0x20 - 0x7E`). The 95 eligible characters are listed below:
|
|
|
|
| C | Type | C | Type | C | Type | C | Type |
|
|
|-----|:----------:|-----|:----------:|-----|:----------:|-----|:----------:|
|
|
| `a` | conversion | `A` | conversion | ` ` | flag | `!` | |
|
|
| `b` | conversion | `B` | conversion | `"` | | `#` | flag |
|
|
| `c` | conversion | `C` | conversion | `$` | other | `%` | conversion |
|
|
| `d` | conversion | `D` | conversion | `&` | | `'` | flag |
|
|
| `e` | conversion | `E` | conversion | `(` | | `)` | |
|
|
| `f` | conversion | `F` | conversion | `*` | other | `+` | flag |
|
|
| `g` | conversion | `G` | conversion | `,` | | `-` | flag |
|
|
| `h` | length | `H` | | `.` | other | `/` | |
|
|
| `i` | conversion | `I` | length | `0` | digit | `1` | digit |
|
|
| `j` | length | `J` | conversion | `2` | digit | `3` | digit |
|
|
| `k` | | `K` | | `4` | digit | `5` | digit |
|
|
| `l` | length | `L` | length | `6` | digit | `7` | digit |
|
|
| `m` | conversion | `M` | | `8` | digit | `9` | digit |
|
|
| `n` | conversion | `N` | | `:` | | `;` | |
|
|
| `o` | conversion | `O` | conversion | `<` | | `=` | |
|
|
| `p` | conversion | `P` | | `>` | | `?` | |
|
|
| `q` | length | `Q` | | `@` | | `[` | |
|
|
| `r` | | `R` | | `\` | | `]` | |
|
|
| `s` | conversion | `S` | conversion | `^` | | `_` | |
|
|
| `t` | length | `T` | conversion | `~` | | `{` | |
|
|
| `u` | conversion | `U` | conversion | `|` | | `}` | |
|
|
| `v` | | `V` | conversion | `` ` `` | |
|
|
| `w` | length | `W` | |
|
|
| `x` | conversion | `X` | conversion |
|
|
| `y` | conversion | `Y` | conversion |
|
|
| `z` | length | `Z` | length |
|
|
|
|
## JS and C strings
|
|
|
|
C provides no guidance on the actual character set. According to K&R all valid
|
|
characters in source code must be in a character set that is a subset of the
|
|
7-bit ASCII set. This implementation falls back on the UTF-16 base required by
|
|
JS. When converting C literal strings, there are a few differences in escaping:
|
|
|
|
| C escape sequence | Equivalent JS | Notes |
|
|
|:------------------|:--------------|:---------------------------------------|
|
|
| `"\a"` | `"\007"` | BEL character will not ring in browser |
|
|
| `"\?"` | `"?"` | JS does not handle trigraphs |
|
|
| `"\ooo"` (octal) | `"\ooo"` | JS uses Latin-1 for non-ASCII codes |
|
|
| `"\xhh"` (hex) | `"\xhh"` | JS uses Latin-1 for non-ASCII codes |
|
|
|
|
## Browser Deviations
|
|
|
|
Opera does not always include the last significant digit in base 16 rendering.
|
|
For example, `(-6.9e-11).toString(16)` is `"0.000000004bddc5fd160168"` in every
|
|
other browser but is `"0.000000004bddc5fd16017"` in Opera. The test suite skips
|
|
the `%a/%A` precision-less formats in Opera.
|
|
|
|
`Object.prototype.toString.call` gives unexpected results in older browsers, and
|
|
no attempt is made to correct for them. The test suite ignores those cases:
|
|
|
|
| value | `%#T` expected | `%#T` IE < 9 | `%#T` Android < 4.4 |
|
|
|:------------|:---------------|:-------------|:--------------------|
|
|
| `null` | `"Null"` | `"Object"` | `"global"` |
|
|
| `undefined` | `"Undefined"` | `"Object"` | `"global"` |
|
|
|
|
## Support Summary
|
|
|
|
- Full [POSIX](http://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/functions/printf.html) conversion support with extensions!
|
|
[Conversion Specifier Table](#conversion-specifier-quick-reference-table)
|
|
- Full support for POSIX flags and positional parameters
|
|
- Emulation of BSD `quad_t` and `u_quad_t` conversion
|
|
- Parser accepts but does not emulate CRT wide and unicode character conversions
|
|
- glibc `Z` length conversion and extended `m` error support
|
|
- Parser fails on CRT `I32`/`I64` fixed lengths
|
|
- Default `LP64` data model but can be configured to support `ILP32` or `LLP64`
|
|
|