Provided by: rust-coreutils_0.0.20-1_amd64 bug

NAME

       printf - Print output based off of the format string and proceeding arguments.

SYNOPSIS

       printf [--help] [--version] [FORMATSTRING] [ARGUMENT]

DESCRIPTION

       Print output based off of the format string and proceeding arguments.

OPTIONS

       --help Print help information

       --version
              Print version information

       [FORMATSTRING]

       [ARGUMENT]

EXTRA

       basic anonymous string templating:

       prints  format  string  at  least once, repeating as long as there are remaining arguments
       output prints escaped literals in the format string as character literals output  replaces
       anonymous fields with the next unused argument, formatted according to the field.

       Prints   the   ,  replacing  escaped  character  sequences  with  character  literals  and
       substitution field sequences with passed arguments

       literally,  with  the  exception  of  the  below  escaped  character  sequences,  and  the
       substitution sequences described further down.

       ### ESCAPE SEQUENCES

       The  following  escape  sequences,  organized  here  in alphabetical order, will print the
       corresponding character literal:

       * \"      double quote

       * \\\\    backslash

       * \\a     alert (BEL)

       * \\b     backspace

       * \\c     End-of-Input

       * \\e     escape

       * \\f     form feed

       * \\n     new line

       * \\r     carriage return

       * \\t     horizontal tab

       * \\v     vertical tab

       * \\NNN   byte with value expressed in octal value NNN (1 to 3 digits)
                 values greater than 256 will be treated

       * \\xHH   byte with value expressed in hexadecimal value NN (1 to 2 digits)

       * \\uHHHH Unicode (IEC 10646) character with value expressed in hexadecimal value HHHH  (4
       digits)

       * \\uHHHH Unicode character with value expressed in hexadecimal value HHHH (8 digits)

       * %%      a single %

       ### SUBSTITUTIONS

       #### SUBSTITUTION QUICK REFERENCE

       Fields

       * %s: string * %b: string parsed for literals second parameter is max length

       * %c: char no second parameter

       * %i or %d: 64-bit integer * %u:       64 bit unsigned integer * %x or %X: 64-bit unsigned
       integer as hex * %o:       64-bit unsigned integer as octal
                   second parameter is min-width, integer
                   output below that width is padded with leading zeroes

       * %f or %F: decimal floating point value * %e or %E: scientific  notation  floating  point
       value  *  %g  or  %G:  shorter  of specially interpreted decimal or SciNote floating point
       value.
                   second parameter is
                     -max places after decimal point for floating point output
                     -max number of significant digits for scientific notation output

       parameterizing fields

       examples:

       printf '%4.3i' 7

       It has a first parameter of 4 and a second parameter of 3 and will result in ' 007'

       printf '%.1s' abcde

       It has no first parameter and a second parameter of 1 and will result in 'a'

       printf '%4c' q

       It has a first parameter of 4 and no second parameter and will result in  '   q'

       The first parameter of a field is the minimum width to pad the output to if the output  is
       less than this absolute value of this width, it will be padded with leading spaces, or, if
       the argument is negative, with trailing spaces. the default is zero.

       The second parameter of a field is particular to the output field type.  defaults  can  be
       found in the full substitution help below

       special prefixes to numeric arguments

       *  0:   (e.g.  010)   interpret argument as octal (integer output fields only) * 0x: (e.g.
       0xABC) interpret argument as hex (numeric output fields only) * \': (e.g. \'a)   interpret
       argument as a character constant

       #### HOW TO USE SUBSTITUTIONS

       Substitutions  are  used  to  pass  additional  argument(s)  into the FORMAT string, to be
       formatted a particular way. E.g.

       printf 'the letter %X comes before the letter %X' 10 11

       will print

       the letter A comes before the letter B

       because the substitution field %X means 'take an  integer  argument  and  write  it  as  a
       hexadecimal number'

       Passing  more  arguments  than are in the format string will cause the format string to be
       repeated for the remaining substitutions

       printf 'it is %i F in %s \n' 22 Portland 25 Boston 27 New York

       will print

       it is 22 F in Portland it is 25 F in Boston it is 27 F in Boston

       If a format string is printed but there  are  less  arguments  remaining  than  there  are
       substitution  fields,  substitution  fields  without  an  argument  will  default to empty
       strings, or for numeric fields the value 0

       #### AVAILABLE SUBSTITUTIONS

       This program, like GNU coreutils printf, interprets a  modified  subset  of  the  POSIX  C
       printf spec, a quick reference to substitutions is below.

       #### STRING SUBSTITUTIONS

       All  string  fields  have  a  'max  width'  parameter %.3s means 'print no more than three
       characters of the original input'

       * %s: string

       * %b: escaped string - the string will be checked for any escaped literals from
             the escaped literal list above, and translate them to literal characters.
             e.g. \\n will be transformed into a newline character.
             One special rule about %b mode is that octal literals are interpreted differently
             In arguments passed by %b, pass octal-interpreted literals must be in  the  form  of
       \\0NNN
             instead of \\NNN. (Although, for legacy reasons, octal literals in the form of \\NNN
       will
             still be interpreted and not throw a warning, you will have problems if you use this
       for a
             literal whose code begins with zero, as it will be viewed as in \\0NNN form.)

       #### CHAR SUBSTITUTIONS

       The character field does not have a secondary parameter.

       * %c: a single character

       #### INTEGER SUBSTITUTIONS

       All  integer  fields have a 'pad with zero' parameter %.4i means an integer which if it is
       less than 4 digits in length, is padded with leading zeros until it is 4 digits in length.

       * %d or %i: 64-bit integer

       * %u: 64-bit unsigned integer

       * %x or %X: 64-bit unsigned integer printed in Hexadecimal (base 16)
                   %X instead of %x means to use uppercase letters for 'a' through 'f'

       * %o: 64-bit unsigned integer printed in octal (base 8)

       #### FLOATING POINT SUBSTITUTIONS

       All floating point fields have a 'max decimal places / max significant  digits'  parameter
       %.10f means a decimal floating point with 7 decimal places past 0 %.10e means a scientific
       notation number with 10 significant digits %.10g means the same behavior for  decimal  and
       Sci. Note, respectively, and provides the shortest of each's output.

       Like with GNU coreutils, the value after the decimal point is these outputs is parsed as a
       double first before being rendered  to  text.  For  both  implementations  do  not  expect
       meaningful  precision  past  the 18th decimal place. When using a number of decimal places
       that is 18 or higher, you can expect variation in output between GNU coreutils printf  and
       this printf at the 18th decimal place of +/- 1

       *  %f:  floating  point  value  presented in decimal, truncated and displayed to 6 decimal
       places by
             default. There is not past-double behavior parity with Coreutils printf, values  are
       not
             estimated or adjusted beyond input values.

       * %e or %E: floating point value presented in scientific notation
                   7 significant digits by default
                   %E means use to use uppercase E for the mantissa.

       *  %g  or  %G:  floating  point  value presented in the shortest of decimal and scientific
       notation
                   behaves differently from %f and %E, please see  posix  printf  spec  for  full
       details,
                   some examples of different behavior:
                   Sci Note has 6 significant digits by default
                   Trailing zeroes are removed
                   Instead of being truncated, digit after last is rounded

       Like other behavior in this utility, the design choices of floating point behavior in this
       utility is selected to reproduce in exact the behavior of GNU coreutils'  printf  from  an
       inputs and outputs standpoint.

       ### USING PARAMETERS

       Most  substitution fields can be parameterized using up to 2 numbers that can be passed to
       the field, between the % sign and the field letter.

       The 1st parameter always indicates the minimum width of output, it is useful for  creating
       columnar  output.  Any  output  that  would be less than this minimum width is padded with
       leading spaces The 2nd parameter is proceeded by a dot.  You do not have to use parameters

       ### SPECIAL FORMS OF INPUT

       For numeric input, the following additional forms of input are accepted besides decimal:

       Octal (only with integer): if the argument begins with a 0 the proceeding characters  will
       be interpreted as octal (base 8) for integer fields

       Hexadecimal:  if the argument begins with 0x the proceeding characters will be interpreted
       will be interpreted as hex (base 16) for any numeric fields for float fields,  hexadecimal
       input results in a precision limit (in converting input past the decimal point) of 10^-15

       Character  Constant:  if the argument begins with a single quote character, the first byte
       of the next character will be interpreted as an  8-bit  unsigned  integer.  If  there  are
       additional   bytes,   they   will   throw   an  error  (unless  the  environment  variable
       POSIXLY_CORRECT is set)

VERSION

       v0.0.20

                                          printf 0.0.20                                 printf(1)