Obaro007 / printf

team project printf

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Team Project with Jason Herbert on printf

Authorized functions and macros write (man 2 write) malloc (man 3 malloc) free (man 3 free) va_start (man 3 va_start) va_end (man 3 va_end) va_copy (man 3 va_copy) va_arg (man 3 va_arg)

Compilation Your code will be compiled this way: $ gcc -Wall -Werror -Wextra -pedantic -std=gnu89 *.c As a consequence, be careful not to push any c file containing a main function in the root directory of your project (you could have a test folder containing all your tests files including main functions) Our main files will include your main header file (main.h): #include main.h You might want to look at the gcc flag -Wno-format when testing with your _printf and the standard printf.

Write a function that produces output according to a format.

Prototype: int _printf(const char *format, ...); Returns: the number of characters printed (excluding the null byte used to end output to strings) write output to stdout, the standard output stream format is a character string. The format string is composed of zero or more directives. See man 3 printf for more detail. You need to handle the following conversion specifiers: c s % You don’t have to reproduce the buffer handling of the C library printf function You don’t have to handle the flag characters You don’t have to handle field width You don’t have to handle precision You don’t have to handle the length modifiers

  1. Education is when you read the fine print. Experience is what you get if you don't mandatory Handle the following conversion specifiers:

d i You don’t have to handle the flag characters You don’t have to handle field width You don’t have to handle precision You don’t have to handle the length modifiers

  1. With a face like mine, I do better in print #advanced Handle the following custom conversion specifiers:

b: the unsigned int argument is converted to binary

  1. What one has not experienced, one will never understand in print #advanced Handle the following conversion specifiers:

u o x X You don’t have to handle the flag characters You don’t have to handle field width You don’t have to handle precision You don’t have to handle the length modifiers

  1. Nothing in fine print is ever good news #advanced Use a local buffer of 1024 chars in order to call write as little as possible

  2. My weakness is wearing too much leopard print #advanced Handle the following custom conversion specifier:

S : prints the string. Non printable characters (0 < ASCII value < 32 or >= 127) are printed this way: \x, followed by the ASCII code value in hexadecimal (upper case - always 2 characters)

  1. How is the world ruled and led to war? Diplomats lie to journalists and believe these lies when they see them in print #advanced Handle the following conversion specifier: p.

You don’t have to handle the flag characters You don’t have to handle field width You don’t have to handle precision You don’t have to handle the length modifiers

  1. The big print gives and the small print takes away #advanced Handle the following flag characters for non-custom conversion specifiers:

space

  1. Sarcasm is lost in print #advanced Handle the following length modifiers for non-custom conversion specifiers:

l h Conversion specifiers to handle: d, i, u, o, x, X

  1. Print some money and give it to us for the rain forests #advanced Handle the field width for non-custom conversion specifiers.

  2. The negative is the equivalent of the composer's score, and the print the performance #advanced Handle the precision for non-custom conversion specifiers.

  3. It's depressing when you're still around and your albums are out of print #advanced Handle the 0 flag character for non-custom conversion specifiers.

  4. Every time that I wanted to give up, if I saw an interesting textile, print what ever, suddenly I would see a collection #advanced Handle the - flag character for non-custom conversion specifiers.

  5. Print is the sharpest and the strongest weapon of our party #advanced Handle the following custom conversion specifier:

r : prints the reversed string

  1. The flood of print has turned reading into a process of gulping rather than savoring #advanced Handle the following custom conversion specifier:

R: prints the rot13'ed string

#advanced All the above options work well together.

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team project printf


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