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Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting awk treating variables differently in UNIX-Linux Post 302980768 by Don Cragun on Friday 2nd of September 2016 03:38:59 AM
Old 09-02-2016
Quote:
Originally Posted by wanderingmind16
Ok, it is not just awk.

Code:
UNIX>printf "%05s\n" 123
00123

Linux>printf "%05s\n" 123
  123

As I mentioned in post #3 above, this is not surprising. You will probably also find the same difference in the printf family of functions in libc on those systems (for C and C++ programs using printf(), fprintf(), sprintf(), etc.).
This User Gave Thanks to Don Cragun For This Post:
 

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curl_printf(3)							  libcurl Manual						    curl_printf(3)

NAME
curl_maprintf, curl_mfprintf, curl_mprintf, curl_msnprintf, curl_msprintf curl_mvaprintf, curl_mvfprintf, curl_mvprintf, curl_mvsnprintf, curl_mvsprintf - formatted output conversion SYNOPSIS
#include <curl/mprintf.h> int curl_mprintf(const char *format, ...); int curl_mfprintf(FILE *fd, const char *format, ...); int curl_msprintf(char *buffer, const char *format, ...); int curl_msnprintf(char *buffer, size_t maxlength, const char *format, ...); int curl_mvprintf(const char *format, va_list args); int curl_mvfprintf(FILE *fd, const char *format, va_list args); int curl_mvsprintf(char *buffer, const char *format, va_list args); int curl_mvsnprintf(char *buffer, size_t maxlength, const char *format, va_list args); char *curl_maprintf(const char *format, ...); char *curl_mvaprintf(const char *format, va_list args); DESCRIPTION
These are all functions that produce output according to a format string and given arguments. These are mostly clones of the well-known C- style functions and there will be no detailed explanation of all available formatting rules and usage here. See this table for notable exceptions. curl_mprintf() Normal printf() clone. curl_mfprintf() Normal fprintf() clone. curl_msprintf() Normal sprintf() clone. curl_msnprintf() snprintf() clone. Many systems don't have this. It is just like sprintf but with an extra argument after the buffer that specifies the length of the target buffer. curl_mvprintf() Normal vprintf() clone. curl_mvfprintf() Normal vfprintf() clone. curl_mvsprintf() Normal vsprintf() clone. curl_mvsnprintf() vsnprintf() clone. Many systems don't have this. It is just like vsprintf but with an extra argument after the buffer that specifies the length of the target buffer. curl_maprintf() Like printf() but returns the output string as a malloc()ed string. The returned string must be free()ed by the receiver. curl_mvaprintf() Like curl_maprintf() but takes a va_list pointer argument instead of a variable amount of arguments. To easily use all these cloned functions instead of the normal ones, #define _MPRINTF_REPLACE before you include the <curl/mprintf.h> file. Then all the normal names like printf, fprintf, sprintf etc will use the curl-functions instead. AVAILABILITY
These function will be removed from the public libcurl API in a near future. They will instead be made "available" by source code access only, and then as curlx_-prefixed functions. See lib/README.curlx for further details. RETURN VALUE
The curl_maprintf and curl_mvaprintf functions return a pointer to a newly allocated string, or NULL if it failed. All other functions return the number of characters they actually outputted. SEE ALSO
printf(3), sprintf(3), fprintf(3), vprintf(3) libcurl 7.12 30 April 2004 curl_printf(3)
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