Back to Appendix A --
Index --
Appendix C
Appendix B - Standard Library
This appendix is a summary of the library defined by the ANSI standard. The
standard library is not part of the C language proper, but an environment
that supports standard C will provide the function declarations and type and
macro definitions of this library. We have omitted a few functions that are
of limited utility or easily synthesized from others; we have omitted
multi-byte characters; and we have omitted discussion of locale issues; that
is, properties that depend on local language, nationality, or culture.
The functions, types and macros of the standard library are declared in
standard headers:
<assert.h> <float.h> <math.h> <stdarg.h> <stdlib.h>
<ctype.h> <limits.h> <setjmp.h> <stddef.h> <string.h>
<errno.h> <locale.h> <signal.h> <stdio.h> <time.h>
A header can be accessed by
#include <header>
Headers may be included in any order and any number of times. A header must
be included outside of any external declaration or definition and before any
use of anything it declares. A header need not be a source file.
External identifiers that begin with an underscore are reserved for use by
the library, as are all other identifiers that begin with an underscore and
an upper-case letter or another underscore.
The input and output functions, types, and macros defined in
<stdio.h> represent nearly one third of the library.
A stream is a source or destination of data that may be associated
with a disk or other peripheral. The library supports text streams and binary
streams, although on some systems, notably UNIX, these are identical. A text
stream is a sequence of lines; each line has zero or more characters and is
terminated by '\n'. An environment may need to convert a text stream
to or from some other representation (such as mapping '\n' to
carriage return and linefeed). A binary stream is a sequence of unprocessed
bytes that record internal data, with the property that if it is written,
then read back on the same system, it will compare equal.
A stream is connected to a file or device by opening it; the
connection is broken by closing the stream. Opening a file returns
a pointer to an object of type FILE, which records whatever
information is necessary to control the stream. We will use ``file pointer''
and ``stream'' interchangeably when there is no ambiguity.
When a program begins execution, the three streams stdin,
stdout, and stderr are already open.
The following functions deal with operations on files. The type
size_t is the unsigned integral type produced by the sizeof
operator.
- FILE *fopen(const char *filename, const char *mode)
- fopen opens the named file, and returns a stream, or
NULL if the attempt fails. Legal values for mode
include:
"r" | open text file for reading |
"w" | create text file for writing; discard previous contents if any |
"a" | append; open or create text file for writing at end of file |
"r+" | open text file for update (i.e., reading and writing) |
"w+" | create text file for update, discard previous contents if any |
"a+" | append; open or create text file for update, writing at end |
- Update mode permits reading and writing the same file; fflush or
a file-positioning function must be called between a read and a write or
vice versa. If the mode includes b after the initial letter, as
in "rb" or "w+b", that indicates a binary file.
Filenames are limited to FILENAME_MAX characters. At most
FOPEN_MAX files may be open at once.
-
FILE *freopen(const char *filename, const char *mode, FILE *stream)
- freopen opens the file with the specified mode and associates
the stream with it. It returns stream, or NULL if an
error occurs. freopen is normally used to change the files
associated with stdin, stdout, or stderr.
-
int fflush(FILE *stream)
- On an output stream, fflush causes any buffered but unwritten
data to be written; on an input stream, the effect is undefined. It
returns EOF for a write error, and zero otherwise.
fflush(NULL) flushes all output streams.
-
int fclose(FILE *stream)
- fclose flushes any unwritten data for stream, discards
any unread buffered input, frees any automatically allocated buffer, then
closes the stream. It returns EOF if any errors occurred, and
zero otherwise.
-
int remove(const char *filename)
- remove removes the named file, so that a subsequent attempt to
open it will fail. It returns non-zero if the attempt fails.
-
int rename(const char *oldname, const char *newname)
- rename changes the name of a file; it returns non-zero if the
attempt fails.
-
FILE *tmpfile(void)
- tmpfile creates a temporary file of mode "wb+" that will be
automatically removed when closed or when the program terminates normally.
tmpfile returns a stream, or NULL if it could not create the file.
-
char *tmpnam(char s[L_tmpnam])
- tmpnam(NULL) creates a string that is not the name of an
existing file, and returns a pointer to an internal static array.
tmpnam(s) stores the string in s as well as returning
it as the function value; s must have room for at least
L_tmpnam characters. tmpnam generates a different name
each time it is called; at most TMP_MAX different names are
guaranteed during execution of the program. Note that tmpnam
creates a name, not a file.
-
int setvbuf(FILE *stream, char *buf, int mode, size_t size)
- setvbuf controls buffering for the stream; it must be called
before reading, writing or any other operation. A mode of _IOFBF
causes full buffering, _IOLBF line buffering of text files, and
_IONBF no buffering. If buf is not NULL, it
will be used as the buffer, otherwise a buffer will be allocated.
size determines the buffer size. setvbuf returns
non-zero for any error.
-
void setbuf(FILE *stream, char *buf)
- If buf is NULL, buffering is turned off for the stream.
Otherwise, setbuf is equivalent to
(void) setvbuf(stream, buf, _IOFBF, BUFSIZ).
The printf functions provide formatted output conversion.
int fprintf(FILE *stream, const char *format, ...)
fprintf converts and writes output to stream under the
control of format. The return value is the number of characters
written, or negative if an error occurred.
The format string contains two types of objects: ordinary characters, which
are copied to the output stream, and conversion specifications, each of which
causes conversion and printing of the next successive argument to
fprintf. Each conversion specification begins with the character
% and ends with a conversion character. Between the % and
the conversion character there may be, in order:
- Flags (in any order), which modify the specification:
- -, which specifies left adjustment of the converted
argument in its field.
- +, which specifies that the number will always be printed
with a sign.
- space: if the first character is not a sign, a space will
be prefixed.
- 0: for numeric conversions, specifies padding to the field
width with leading zeros.
- #, which specifies an alternate output form. For o,
the first digit will become zero. For x or X,
0x or 0X will be prefixed to a non-zero result.
For e, E, f, g, and G,
the output will always have a decimal point; for g and
G, trailing zeros will not be removed.
- A number specifying a minimum field width. The converted argument will
be printed in a field at least this wide, and wider if necessary. If the
converted argument has fewer characters than the field width it will be
padded on the left (or right, if left adjustment has been requested) to
make up the field width. The padding character is normally space, but is
0 if the zero padding flag is present.
- A period, which separates the field width from the precision.
- A number, the precision, that specifies the maximum number of characters
to be printed from a string, or the number of digits to be printed after
the decimal point for e, E, or f conversions,
or the number of significant digits for g or G
conversion, or the number of digits to be printed for an integer (leading
0s will be added to make up the necessary width).
- A length modifier h, l (letter ell), or L.
``h'' indicates that the corresponding argument is to be printed
as a short or unsigned short; ``l'' indicates
that the argument is a long or unsigned long,
``L'' indicates that the argument is a long double.
Width or precision or both may be specified as *, in which case the value
is computed by converting the next argument(s), which must be int.
The conversion characters and their meanings are shown in Table B.1.
If the character after the % is not a conversion
character, the behavior is undefined.
Table B.1 Printf Conversions
Character | Argument type; Printed As
|
d,i | int; signed decimal notation. |
o | int; unsigned octal notation (without a leading zero). |
x,X | unsigned int; unsigned hexadecimal notation
(without a leading 0x or 0X), using
abcdef for 0x or ABCDEF
for 0X. |
u | int; unsigned decimal notation. |
c | int; single character, after conversion to
unsigned char |
s | char *; characters from the string are
printed until a '\0' is reached or until the
number of characters indicated by the precision have
been printed. |
f | double; decimal notation of the form
[-]mmm.ddd, where the number of
d's is given by the precision. The default
precision is 6; a precision of 0 suppresses the
decimal point. |
e,E | double; decimal notation of the form
[-]m.dddddde+/-xx or
[-]m.ddddddE+/-xx,
where the number of d's is specified by the
precision. The default precision is 6; a precision
of 0 suppresses the decimal point. |
g,G | double; %e or %E is used
if the exponent is less than -4 or greater than or
equal to the precision; otherwise %f is
used. Trailing zeros and a trailing decimal point
are not printed. |
p | void *; print as a pointer
(implementation-dependent representation). |
n | int *; the number of characters written so
far by this call to printf is written
into the argument. No argument is converted. |
% | no argument is converted; print a % |
-
int printf(const char *format, ...)
- printf(...) is equivalent to fprintf(stdout, ...).
-
int sprintf(char *s, const char *format, ...)
-
sprintf is the same as printf except that the output is written
into the string s, terminated with '\0'. s must be
big enough to hold the result. The return count does not include the
'\0'.
-
int vprintf(const char *format, va_list arg)
int vfprintf(FILE *stream, const char *format, va_list arg)
int vsprintf(char *s, const char *format, va_list arg)
- The functions vprintf, vfprintf, and vsprintf
are equivalent to the corresponding printf functions, except
that the variable argument list is replaced by arg, which has
been initialized by the va_start macro and perhaps
va_arg calls. See the discussion of <stdarg.h> in
Section B.7.
The scanf function deals with formatted input conversion.
int fscanf(FILE *stream, const char *format, ...)
fscanf reads from stream under control of format,
and assigns converted values through subsequent arguments, each of which
must be a pointer. It returns when format is exhausted.
fscanf returns EOF if end of file or an error occurs before
any conversion; otherwise it returns the number of input items converted and
assigned.
The format string usually contains conversion specifications, which are used
to direct interpretation of input. The format string may contain:
- Blanks or tabs, which are not ignored.
- Ordinary characters (not %), which are expected to match the next
non-white space character of the input stream.
- Conversion specifications, consisting of a %, an optional
assignment suppression character *, an optional number specifying
a maximum field width, an optional h, l, or L
indicating the width of the target, and a conversion character.
A conversion specification determines the conversion of the next input field.
Normally the result is placed in the variable pointed to by the corresponding
argument. If assignment suppression is indicated by *, as in
%*s, however, the input field is simply skipped; no assignment is made.
An input field is defined as a string of non-white space characters; it
extends either to the next white space character or until the field width, if
specified, is exhausted. This implies that scanf will read across line
boundaries to find its input, since newlines are white space. (White space
characters are blank, tab, newline, carriage return, vertical tab, and
formfeed.)
The conversion character indicates the interpretation of the input field. The
corresponding argument must be a pointer. The legal conversion characters are
shown in Table B.2.
The conversion characters d, i, n, o,
u, and x may be preceded by h if the argument is a
pointer to short rather than int, or by l (letter ell) if
the argument is a pointer to long. The conversion characters
e, f, and g may be preceded by l if a
pointer to double rather than float is in the argument
list, and by L if a pointer to a long double.
Table B.2 Scanf Conversions
Character | Input Data; Argument type
|
d | decimal integer; int*
|
i | integer; int*. The integer may be in octal
(leading 0) or hexadecimal (leading
0x or 0X).
|
o | octal integer (with or without leading zero); int *.
|
u | unsigned decimal integer; unsigned int *.
|
x | hexadecimal integer (with or without leading
0x or 0X); int*.
|
c | characters; char*. The next input characters
are placed in the indicated array, up to the number
given by the width field; the default is 1. No
'\0' is added. The normal skip over white
space characters is suppressed in this case; to read
the next non-white space character, use %1s.
|
s | string of non-white space characters (not quoted);
char *, pointing to an array of characters
large enough to hold the string and a terminating
'\0' that will be added.
|
e,f,g | floating-point number; float *. The input
format for float's is an optional sign, a
string of numbers possibly containing a decimal
point, and an optional exponent field containing
an E or e followed by a possibly
signed integer.
|
p | pointer value as printed by printf("%p");, void *.
|
n | writes into the argument the number of characters
read so far by this call; int *. No input is
read. The converted item count is not incremented.
|
[...] | matches the longest non-empty string of input
characters from the set between brackets; char
*. A '\0' is added. []...]
includes ] in the set.
|
[^...] | matches the longest non-empty string of input
characters not from the set between
brackets; char *. A '\0' is
added. [^]...] includes ] in
the set.
|
% | literal %; no assignment is made. |
-
int scanf(const char *format, ...)
- scanf(...) is identical to fscanf(stdin, ...).
-
int sscanf(const char *s, const char *format, ...)
- sscanf(s, ...) is equivalent to scanf(...) except that
the input characters are taken from the string s.
-
int fgetc(FILE *stream)
- fgetc returns the next character of stream as an
unsigned char (converted to an int), or EOF if
end of file or error occurs.
-
char *fgets(char *s, int n, FILE *stream)
- fgets reads at most the next n-1 characters into the
array s, stopping if a newline is encountered; the newline is
included in the array, which is terminated by '\0'.
fgets returns s, or NULL if end of file or
error occurs.
-
int fputc(int c, FILE *stream)
- fputc writes the character c (converted to an
unsigend char) on stream. It returns the character
written, or EOF for error.
-
int fputs(const char *s, FILE *stream)
- fputs writes the string s (which need not contain
\n) on stream; it returns non-negative, or EOF
for an error.
-
int getc(FILE *stream)
- getc is equivalent to fgetc except that if it is a
macro, it may evaluate stream more than once.
-
int getchar(void)
- getchar is equivalent to getc(stdin).
-
char *gets(char *s)
- gets reads the next input line into the array s; it
replaces the terminating newline with '\0'. It returns
s, or NULL if end of file or error occurs.
-
int putc(int c, FILE *stream)
- putc is equivalent to fputc except that if it is a macro, it may
evaluate stream more than once.
-
int putchar(int c)
- putchar(c) is equivalent to putc(c,stdout).
-
int puts(const char *s)
- puts writes the string s and a newline to
stdout. It returns EOF if an error occurs, non-negative
otherwise.
-
int ungetc(int c, FILE *stream)
- ungetc pushes c (converted to an unsigned
char) back onto stream, where it will be returned on the
next read. Only one character of pushback per stream is guaranteed.
EOF may not be pushed back. ungetc returns the
character pushed back, or EOF for error.
-
size_t fread(void *ptr, size_t size, size_t nobj, FILE *stream)
- fread reads from stream into the array ptr at
most nobj objects of size size. fread returns
the number of objects read; this may be less than the number requested.
feof and ferror must be used to determine status.
-
size_t fwrite(const void *ptr, size_t size, size_t nobj, FILE *stream)
- fwrite writes, from the array ptr, nobj
objects of size size on stream. It returns the number
of objects written, which is less than nobj on error.
-
int fseek(FILE *stream, long offset, int origin)
- fseek sets the file position for stream; a subsequent
read or write will access data beginning at the new position. For a
binary file, the position is set to offset characters from
origin, which may be SEEK_SET (beginning),
SEEK_CUR (current position), or SEEK_END (end of file).
For a text stream, offset must be zero, or a value returned by
ftell (in which case origin must be SEEK_SET).
fseek returns non-zero on error.
-
long ftell(FILE *stream)
- ftell returns the current file position for stream, or
-1 on error.
-
void rewind(FILE *stream)
- rewind(fp) is equivalent to fseek(fp, 0L, SEEK_SET); clearerr(fp).
-
int fgetpos(FILE *stream, fpos_t *ptr)
-
fgetpos records the current position in stream in
*ptr, for subsequent use by fsetpos. The type
fpos_t is suitable for recording such values. fgetpos
returns non-zero on error.
-
int fsetpos(FILE *stream, const fpos_t *ptr)
- fsetpos positions stream at the position recorded by
fgetpos in *ptr. fsetpos returns non-zero on
error.
Many of the functions in the library set status indicators when error or end
of file occur. These indicators may be set and tested explicitly. In
addition, the integer expression errno (declared in
<errno.h>) may contain an error number that gives further
information about the most recent error.
-
void clearerr(FILE *stream)
- clearerr clears the end of file and error indicators for stream.
-
int feof(FILE *stream)
- feof returns non-zero if the end of file indicator for
stream is set.
-
int ferror(FILE *stream)
- ferror returns non-zero if the error indicator for stream is set.
-
void perror(const char *s)
- perror(s) prints s and an implementation-defined error message
corresponding to the integer in errno, as if by
fprintf(stderr, "%s: %s\n", s, "error message");
-
See strerror in Section B.3.
The header <ctype.h> declares functions for testing
characters. For each function, the argument list is an int, whose
value must be EOF or representable as an unsigned char, and
the return value is an int. The functions return non-zero (true) if
the argument c satisfies the condition described, and zero if not.
isalnum(c) | isalpha(c) or isdigit(c) is true |
isalpha(c) | isupper(c) or islower(c) is true |
iscntrl(c) | control character |
isdigit(c) | decimal digit |
isgraph(c) | printing character except space |
islower(c) | lower-case letter |
isprint(c) | printing character including space |
ispunct(c) | printing character except space or letter or digit |
isspace(c) | space, formfeed, newline, carriage return, tab, vertical tab |
isupper(c) | upper-case letter |
isxdigit(c) | hexadecimal digit |
In the seven-bit ASCII character set, the printing characters are
0x20 (' ') to 0x7E ('-'); the control characters are 0
NUL to 0x1F (US), and 0x7F (DEL).
In addition, there are two functions that convert the case of letters:
int tolower(c) | convert c to lower case |
int toupper(c) | convert c to upper case |
If c is an upper-case letter, tolower(c) returns the
corresponding lower-case letter, toupper(c) returns the
corresponding upper-case letter; otherwise it returns c.
There are two groups of string functions defined in the header
<string.h>. The first have names beginning with str;
the second have names beginning with mem. Except for
memmove, the behavior is undefined if copying takes place between
overlapping objects. Comparison functions treat arguments as unsigned
char arrays.
In the following table, variables s and t are of type
char *; cs and ct are of type const char
*; n is of type size_t; and c is an
int converted to char.
char *strcpy(s,ct) | copy string ct to string s, including
'\0'; return s. |
char *strncpy(s,ct,n) | copy at most n characters of string ct
to s; return s. Pad with '\0''s
if ct has fewer than n characters. |
char *strcat(s,ct) | concatenate string ct to end of string
s; return s. |
char *strncat(s,ct,n) | concatenate at most n characters of string
ct to string s, terminate s with
'\0'; return s. |
int strcmp(cs,ct) | compare string cs to string ct, return
<0 if cs<ct, 0 if cs==ct, or >0 if
cs>ct. |
int strncmp(cs,ct,n) | compare at most n characters of string cs
to string ct; return <0 if cs<ct, 0
if cs==ct, or >0 if cs>ct. |
char *strchr(cs,c) | return pointer to first occurrence of c in
cs or NULL if not present. |
char *strrchr(cs,c) | return pointer to last occurrence of c in
cs or NULL if not present. |
size_t strspn(cs,ct) | return length of prefix of cs consisting of
characters in ct. |
size_t strcspn(cs,ct) | return length of prefix of cs consisting of
characters not in ct. |
char *strpbrk(cs,ct) | return pointer to first occurrence in string
cs of any character string ct, or NULL
if not present. |
char *strstr(cs,ct) | return pointer to first occurrence of string
ct in cs, or NULL if not present. |
size_t strlen(cs) | return length of cs. |
char *strerror(n) | return pointer to implementation-defined string
corresponding to error n. |
char *strtok(s,ct) | strtok searches s for tokens delimited
by characters from ct; see below. |
A sequence of calls of strtok(s,ct) splits s into tokens, each
delimited by a character from ct. The first call in a sequence has a
non-NULL s, it finds the first token in s consisting of
characters not in ct; it terminates that by overwriting the next
character of s with '\0' and returns a pointer to the token. Each
subsequent call, indicated by a NULL value of s, returns the next
such token, searching from just past the end of the previous one. strtok
returns NULL when no further token is found. The string ct may be
different on each call.
The mem... functions are meant for manipulating objects as character
arrays; the intent is an interface to efficient routines. In the following
table, s and t are of type void *; cs and ct are
of type const void *; n is of type size_t; and c is an
int converted to an unsigned char.
void *memcpy(s,ct,n) | copy n characters from ct to s,
and return s. |
void *memmove(s,ct,n) | same as memcpy except that
it works even if the objects overlap. |
int memcmp(cs,ct,n) | compare the first n characters of cs
with ct; return as with strcmp. |
void *memchr(cs,c,n) | return pointer to first occurrence of
character c in cs, or NULL
if not present among the first n
characters. |
void *memset(s,c,n) | place character c into first n
characters of s, return s. |
The header <math.h> declares mathematical functions and macros.
The macros EDOM and ERANGE (found in
<errno.h>) are non-zero integral constants that are used to
signal domain and range errors for the functions; HUGE_VAL is a
positive double value. A domain error occurs if an argument
is outside the domain over which the function is defined. On a domain error,
errno is set to EDOM; the return value is
implementation-defined. A range error occurs if the result of the
function cannot be represented as a double. If the result overflows,
the function returns HUGE_VAL with the right sign, and
errno is set to ERANGE. If the result underflows, the
function returns zero; whether errno is set to ERANGE is
implementation-defined.
In the following table, x and y are of type
double, n is an int, and all functions return
double. Angles for trigonometric functions are expressed in radians.
sin(x) | sine of x |
cos(x) | cosine of x |
tan(x) | tangent of x |
asin(x) | sin-1(x) in range [-pi/2,pi/2], x in [-1,1]. |
acos(x) | cos-1(x) in range [0,pi], x in [-1,1]. |
atan(x) | tan-1(x) in range [-pi/2,pi/2]. |
atan2(y,x) | tan-1(y/x) in range [-pi,pi]. |
sinh(x) | hyperbolic sine of x |
cosh(x) | hyperbolic cosine of x |
tanh(x) | hyperbolic tangent of x |
exp(x) | exponential function ex |
log(x) | natural logarithm ln(x), x>0. |
log10(x) | base 10 logarithm log10(x), x>0. |
pow(x,y) | xy. A domain error occurs if x=0
and y<=0, or if x<0 and
y is not an integer. |
sqrt(x) | sqare root of x, x>=0. |
ceil(x) | smallest integer not less than x, as a double. |
floor(x) | largest integer not greater than x, as a double. |
fabs(x) | absolute value |x| |
ldexp(x,n) | x*2n |
frexp(x, int *ip) | splits x into a normalized
fraction in the interval [1/2,1) which is returned, and
a power of 2, which is stored in *exp. If
x is zero, both parts of the result are zero. |
modf(x, double *ip) | splits x into integral and
fractional parts, each with the same sign as x.
It stores the integral part in *ip, and
returns the fractional part. |
fmod(x,y) | floating-point remainder of x/y, with
the same sign as x. If y is zero, the
result is implementation-defined.
|
The header <stdlib.h> declares functions for number conversion,
storage allocation, and similar tasks.
double atof(const char *s)
-
atof converts s to double; it is equivalent to
strtod(s, (char**)NULL).
-
int atoi(const char *s)
-
converts s to int; it is equivalent to
(int)strtol(s, (char**)NULL, 10).
-
long atol(const char *s)
-
converts s to long; it is equivalent to
strtol(s, (char**)NULL, 10).
-
double strtod(const char *s, char **endp)
-
strtod converts the prefix of s to double, ignoring leading
white space; it stores a pointer to any unconverted suffix in *endp
unless endp is NULL. If the answer would overflow, HUGE_VAL
is returned with the proper sign; if the answer would underflow, zero is
returned. In either case errno is set to ERANGE.
-
long strtol(const char *s, char **endp, int base)
-
strtol converts the prefix of s to long, ignoring leading
white space; it stores a pointer to any unconverted suffix in *endp
unless endp is NULL. If base is between 2 and 36, conversion
is done assuming that the input is written in that base. If base is
zero, the base is 8, 10, or 16; leading 0 implies octal and leading 0x
or 0X hexadecimal. Letters in either case represent digits from 10 to
base-1; a leading 0x or 0X is permitted in base 16. If the
answer would overflow, LONG_MAX or LONG_MIN is returned,
depending on the sign of the result, and errno is set to ERANGE.
-
unsigned long strtoul(const char *s, char **endp, int base)
-
strtoul is the same as strtol except that the result is
unsigned long and the error value is ULONG_MAX.
-
int rand(void)
- rand returns a pseudo-random integer in the range 0 to
RAND_MAX, which is at least 32767.
-
void srand(unsigned int seed)
-
srand uses seed as the seed for a new sequence of pseudo-random
numbers. The initial seed is 1.
-
void *calloc(size_t nobj, size_t size)
- calloc returns a pointer to space for an array of nobj
objects, each of size size, or NULL if the request cannot
be satisfied. The space is initialized to zero bytes.
-
void *malloc(size_t size)
- malloc returns a pointer to space for an object of size size, or
NULL if the request cannot be satisfied. The space is uninitialized.
-
void *realloc(void *p, size_t size)
- realloc changes the size of the object pointed to by p to
size. The contents will be unchanged up to the minimum of the old
and new sizes. If the new size is larger, the new space is uninitialized.
realloc returns a pointer to the new space, or NULL if
the request cannot be satisfied, in which case *p is unchanged.
-
void free(void *p)
-
free deallocates the space pointed to by p; it does nothing if
p is NULL. p must be a pointer to space previously allocated
by calloc, malloc, or realloc.
-
void abort(void)
- abort causes the program to terminate abnormally, as if by
raise(SIGABRT).
-
void exit(int status)
- exit causes normal program termination. atexit functions are
called in reverse order of registration, open files are flushed, open streams
are closed, and control is returned to the environment. How status is
returned to the environment is implementation-dependent, but zero is taken as
successful termination. The values EXIT_SUCCESS and EXIT_FAILURE
may also be used.
-
int atexit(void (*fcn)(void))
- atexit registers the function fcn to be called when the program
terminates normally; it returns non-zero if the registration cannot be made.
-
int system(const char *s)
- system passes the string s to the environment for
execution. If s is NULL, system returns non-zero if
there is a command processor. If s is not NULL, the
return value is implementation-dependent.
-
char *getenv(const char *name)
- getenv returns the environment string associated with name,
or NULL if no string exists. Details are implementation-dependent.
void *bsearch(const void *key, const void *base,
size_t n, size_t size,
int (*cmp)(const void *keyval, const void *datum))
- bsearch searches base[0]...base[n-1] for an item that matches
*key. The function cmp must return negative if its first argument
(the search key) is less than its second (a table entry), zero if equal, and
positive if greater. Items in the array base must be in ascending order.
bsearch returns a pointer to a matching item, or NULL if none
exists.
void qsort(void *base, size_t n, size_t size,
int (*cmp)(const void *, const void *))
- qsort sorts into ascending order an array base[0]...base[n-1]
of objects of size size. The comparison function cmp is as in
bsearch.
-
int abs(int n)
- abs returns the absolute value of its int argument.
-
long labs(long n)
- labs returns the absolute value of its long argument.
-
div_t div(int num, int denom)
- div computes the quotient and remainder of num/denom. The results
are stored in the int members quot and rem of a structure
of type div_t.
-
ldiv_t ldiv(long num, long denom)
- ldiv computes the quotient and remainder of num/denom.
The results are stored in the long members quot and
rem of a structure of type ldiv_t.
The assert macro is used to add diagnostics to programs:
void assert(int expression)
If expression is zero when
assert(expression)
is executed, the assert macro will print on stderr a message,
such as
Assertion failed: expression, file filename, line nnn
It then calls abort to terminate execution. The source filename and
line number come from the preprocessor macros __FILE__ and
__LINE__.
If NDEBUG is defined at the time <assert.h> is included,
the assert macro is ignored.
The header <stdarg.h> provides facilities for stepping through a list
of function arguments of unknown number and type.
Suppose lastarg is the last named parameter of a function f
with a variable number of arguments. Then declare within f a variable
of type va_list that will point to each argument in turn:
va_list ap;
ap must be initialized once with the macro va_start before
any unnamed argument is accessed:
va_start(va_list ap, lastarg);
Thereafter, each execution of the macro va_arg will produce a value
that has the type and value of the next unnamed argument, and will also
modify ap so the next use of va_arg returns the next argument:
type va_arg(va_list ap, type);
The macro
void va_end(va_list ap);
must be called once after the arguments have been processed but before
f is exited.
The declarations in <setjmp.h> provide a way to avoid the normal
function call and return sequence, typically to permit an immediate return
from a deeply nested function call.
-
int setjmp(jmp_buf env)
- The macro setjmp saves state information in env for use by
longjmp. The return is zero from a direct call of setjmp, and
non-zero from a subsequent call of longjmp. A call to setjmp
can only occur in certain contexts, basically the test of if,
switch, and loops, and only in simple relational expressions.
if (setjmp(env) == 0)
/* get here on direct call */
else
/* get here by calling longjmp */
-
void longjmp(jmp_buf env, int val)
- longjmp restores the state saved by the most recent call to
setjmp, using the information saved in env, and execution
resumes as if the setjmp function had just executed and returned
the non-zero value val. The function containing the setjmp
must not have terminated. Accessible objects have the values they had at
the time longjmp was called, except that non-volatile
automatic variables in the function calling setjmp become
undefined if they were changed after the setjmp call.
The header <signal.h> provides facilities for handling exceptional
conditions that arise during execution, such as an interrupt signal from an
external source or an error in execution.
void (*signal(int sig, void (*handler)(int)))(int)
signal determines how subsequent signals will be handled. If
handler is SIG_DFL, the implementation-defined default behavior is
used, if it is SIG_IGN, the signal is ignored; otherwise, the function
pointed to by handler will be called, with the argument of the type of
signal. Valid signals include
SIGABRT | abnormal termination, e.g., from abort |
SIGFPE | arithmetic error, e.g., zero divide or overflow |
SIGILL | illegal function image, e.g., illegal instruction |
SIGINT | interactive attention, e.g., interrupt |
SIGSEGV | illegal storage access, e.g., access outside memory limits |
SIGTERM | termination request sent to this program |
signal returns the previous value of handler for the specific
signal, or SIG_ERR if an error occurs.
When a signal sig subsequently occurs, the signal is restored to its
default behavior; then the signal-handler function is called, as if by
(*handler)(sig). If the handler returns, execution will resume where it
was when the signal occurred.
The initial state of signals is implementation-defined.
int raise(int sig)
raise sends the signal sig to the program; it returns
non-zero if unsuccessful.
The header <time.h> declares types and functions for manipulating date
and time. Some functions process local time, which may differ from
calendar time, for example because of time zone. clock_t and
time_t are arithmetic types representing times, and struct tm
holds the components of a calendar time:
int tm_sec; | seconds after the minute (0,61) |
int tm_min; | minutes after the hour (0,59) |
int tm_hour; | hours since midnight (0,23) |
int tm_mday; | day of the month (1,31) |
int tm_mon; | months since January (0,11) |
int tm_year; | years since 1900 |
int tm_wday; | days since Sunday (0,6) |
int tm_yday; | days since January 1 (0,365) |
int tm_isdst; | Daylight Saving Time flag |
tm_isdst is positive if Daylight Saving Time is in effect, zero if
not, and negative if the information is not available.
-
clock_t clock(void)
-
clock returns the processor time used by the program since the
beginning of execution, or -1 if unavailable. clock()/CLK_PER_SEC
is a time in seconds.
-
time_t time(time_t *tp)
-
time returns the current calendar time or -1 if the time is not
available. If tp is not NULL, the return value is also assigned
to *tp.
-
double difftime(time_t time2, time_t time1)
-
difftime returns time2-time1 expressed in seconds.
-
time_t mktime(struct tm *tp)
-
mktime converts the local time in the structure *tp into calendar
time in the same representation used by time. The components will have
values in the ranges shown. mktime returns the calendar time or -1
if it cannot be represented.
The next four functions return pointers to static objects that may be
overwritten by other calls.
-
char *asctime(const struct tm *tp)
-
asctime*tp into a string
of the form
Sun Jan 3 15:14:13 1988\n\0
-
char *ctime(const time_t *tp)
-
ctime converts the calendar time *tp to local time; it is
equivalent to
asctime(localtime(tp))
-
struct tm *gmtime(const time_t *tp)
-
gmtime converts the calendar time *tp into Coordinated
Universal Time (UTC). It returns NULL if UTC is not available. The
name gmtime has historical significance.
-
struct tm *localtime(const time_t *tp)
-
localtime converts the calendar time *tp into local time.
-
size_t strftime(char *s, size_t smax, const char *fmt, const struct tm *tp)
-
strftime formats date and time information from *tp into s
according to fmt, which is analogous to a printf format. Ordinary
characters (including the terminating '\0') are copied into
s. Each %c is replaced as described below, using values appropriate for
the local environment. No more than smax characters are placed into
s. strftime returns the number of characters, excluding the
'\0', or zero if more than smax characters were produced.
%a | abbreviated weekday name. |
%A | full weekday name. |
%b | abbreviated month name. |
%B | full month name. |
%c | local date and time representation. |
%d | day of the month (01-31). |
%H | hour (24-hour clock) (00-23). |
%I | hour (12-hour clock) (01-12). |
%j | day of the year (001-366). |
%m | month (01-12). |
%M | minute (00-59). |
%p | local equivalent of AM or PM. |
%S | second (00-61). |
%U | week number of the year (Sunday as 1st day of week) (00-53). |
%w | weekday (0-6, Sunday is 0). |
%W | week number of the year (Monday as 1st day of week) (00-53). |
%x | local date representation. |
%X | local time representation. |
%y | year without century (00-99). |
%Y | year with century. |
%Z | time zone name, if any. |
%% | % |
The header <limits.h> defines constants for the sizes of
integral types. The values below are acceptable minimum magnitudes; larger
values may be used.
CHAR_BIT | 8 | bits in a char |
CHAR_MAX | UCHAR_MAX or SCHAR_MAX | maximum value of char
|
CHAR_MIN | 0 or SCHAR_MIN | maximum value of char |
INT_MAX | 32767 | maximum value of int |
INT_MIN | -32767 | minimum value of int |
LONG_MAX | 2147483647 | maximum value of long |
LONG_MIN | -2147483647 | minimum value of long |
SCHAR_MAX | +127 | maximum value of signed char |
SCHAR_MIN | -127 | minimum value of signed char |
SHRT_MAX | +32767 | maximum value of short |
SHRT_MIN | -32767 | minimum value of short |
UCHAR_MAX | 255 | maximum value of unsigned char |
UINT_MAX | 65535 | maximum value of unsigned int |
ULONG_MAX | 4294967295 | maximum value of unsigned long |
USHRT_MAX | 65535 | maximum value of unsigned short |
The names in the table below, a subset of <float.h>, are constants
related to floating-point arithmetic. When a value is given, it represents
the minimum magnitude for the corresponding quantity. Each implementation
defines appropriate values.
FLT_RADIX | 2 | radix of exponent, representation, e.g., 2, 16 |
FLT_ROUNDS | | floating-point rounding mode for addition |
FLT_DIG | 6 | decimal digits of precision |
FLT_EPSILON | 1E-5 | smallest number x such that 1.0+x != 1.0 |
FLT_MANT_DIG | | number of base FLT_RADIX in mantissa |
FLT_MAX | 1E+37 | maximum floating-point number |
FLT_MAX_EXP | | maximum n such that FLT_RADIXn-1 is representable |
FLT_MIN | 1E-37 | minimum normalized floating-point number |
FLT_MIN_EXP | | minimum n such that 10n is a normalized number |
DBL_DIG | 10 | decimal digits of precision |
DBL_EPSILON | 1E-9 | smallest number x such that 1.0+x != 1.0 |
DBL_MANT_DIG | | number of base FLT_RADIX in mantissa |
DBL_MAX | 1E+37 | maximum double floating-point number |
DBL_MAX_EXP | | maximum n such that FLT_RADIXn-1 is representable |
DBL_MIN | 1E-37 | minimum normalized double floating-point number |
DBL_MIN_EXP | | minimum n such that 10n is a normalized number |
Back to Appendix A --
Index --
Appendix C
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