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Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting How to Convert scientific notation to normal ? Post 94989 by rhfrommn on Thursday 5th of January 2006 11:25:38 AM
Old 01-05-2006
When I check man awk in Solaris it says there is a built in variable called OFMT that controls the output format of numbers. You could try setting that to a different format. Also, it says after the printf you can specify the format, check man printf for details on that. I would guess printf %8d sum would work for your example.
 

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FMTCHECK(3)						   BSD Library Functions Manual 					       FMTCHECK(3)

NAME
fmtcheck -- sanitizes user-supplied printf(3)-style format string LIBRARY
Standard C Library (libc, -lc) SYNOPSIS
#include <stdio.h> const char * fmtcheck(const char *fmt_suspect, const char *fmt_default); DESCRIPTION
The fmtcheck() scans fmt_suspect and fmt_default to determine if fmt_suspect will consume the same argument types as fmt_default and to ensure that fmt_suspect is a valid format string. The printf(3) family of functions cannot verify the types of arguments that they are passed at run-time. In some cases, like catgets(3), it is useful or necessary to use a user-supplied format string with no guarantee that the format string matches the specified arguments. The fmtcheck() was designed to be used in these cases, as in: printf(fmtcheck(user_format, standard_format), arg1, arg2); In the check, field widths, fillers, precisions, etc. are ignored (unless the field width or precision is an asterisk '*' instead of a digit string). Also, any text other than the format specifiers is completely ignored. RETURN VALUES
If fmt_suspect is a valid format and consumes the same argument types as fmt_default, then the fmtcheck() will return fmt_suspect. Other- wise, it will return fmt_default. SECURITY CONSIDERATIONS
Note that the formats may be quite different as long as they accept the same arguments. For example, "%p %o %30s %#llx %-10.*e %n" is com- patible with "This number %lu %d%% and string %s has %qd numbers and %.*g floats (%n)". However, "%o" is not equivalent to "%lx" because the first requires an integer and the second requires a long. SEE ALSO
printf(3) BUGS
The fmtcheck() function does not recognize positional parameters. BSD
October 16, 2002 BSD
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