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Manual Pages for UNIX Operating System command usage for man ecvt

Standard C Library Functions ecvt(3C)

NAME

ecvt, fcvt, gcvt - convert floating-point number to string

SYNOPSIS

#include

char *ecvt(double value, int ndigit, int *restrict decpt, int *restrict sign);

char *fcvt(double value, int ndigit, int *restrict decpt, int *restrict sign); char *gcvt(double value, int ndigit, char *buf);

DESCRIPTION

The ecvt(), fcvt() and gcvt() functions convert floating-

point numbers to null-terminated strings.

ecvt()

The ecvt() function converts value to a null-terminated

string of ndigit digits (where ndigit is reduced to an unspecified limit determined by the precision of a double)

and returns a pointer to the string. The high-order digit

is non-zero, unless the value is 0. The low-order digit is

rounded. The position of the radix character relative to the beginning of the string is stored in the integer pointed to by decpt (negative means to the left of the returned digits). The radix character is not included in the returned string. If the sign of the result is negative, the integer

pointed to by sign is non-zero, otherwise it is 0.

If the converted value is out of range or is not represent-

able, the contents of the returned string are unspecified. fcvt()

The fcvt() function is identical to ecvt() except that ndi-

git specifies the number of digits desired after the radix point. The total number of digits in the result string is

restricted to an unspecified limit as determined by the pre-

cision of a double. gcvt()

The gcvt() function converts value to a null-terminated

string (similar to that of the %g format of printf(3C)) in

the array pointed to by buf and returns buf. It produces ndigit significant digits (limited to an unspecified value

determined by the precision of a double) in %f if possible,

or %e (scientific notation) otherwise. A minus sign is

included in the returned string if value is less than 0. A radix character is included in the returned string if value

SunOS 5.11 Last change: 18 May 2004 1

Standard C Library Functions ecvt(3C)

is not a whole number. Trailing zeros are suppressed where

value is not a whole number. The radix character is deter-

mined by the current locale. If setlocale(3C) has not been called successfully, the default locale, POSIX, is used.

The default locale specifies a period (.) as the radix char-

acter. The LC_NUMERIC category determines the value of the

radix character within the current locale.

RETURN VALUES

The ecvt() and fcvt() functions return a pointer to a null-

terminated string of digits. The gcvt() function returns buf.

ERRORS

No errors are defined.

USAGE

The return values from ecvt() and fcvt() might point to

thread-specific data that can be overwritten by subsequent

calls to these functions by the same thread. For portability to implementations conforming to earlier versions of Solaris, sprintf(3C) is preferred over this function.

ATTRIBUTES

See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attri-

butes:

____________________________________________________________

| ATTRIBUTE TYPE | ATTRIBUTE VALUE |

|_____________________________|_____________________________|

| Interface Stability | Committed |

|_____________________________|_____________________________|

| MT-Level | Safe |

|_____________________________|_____________________________|

| Standard | See standards(5). |

|_____________________________|_____________________________|

SEE ALSO

printf(3C), setlocale(3C), sprintf(3C), attributes(5), stan-

dards(5)

SunOS 5.11 Last change: 18 May 2004 2




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