'What does %[^\n] mean in C?
What does %[^\n] mean in C?
I saw it in a program which uses scanf for taking multiple word input into a string variable. I don't understand though because I learned that scanf can't take multiple words.
Here is the code:
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
int main() {
char line[100];
scanf("%[^\n]",line);
printf("Hello,World\n");
printf("%s",line);
return 0;
}
Solution 1:[1]
scanf("%[^\n]",line); is a problematic way to read a line. It is worse than gets().
C defines line as:
A text stream is an ordered sequence of characters composed into lines, each line consisting of zero or more characters plus a terminating new-line character. Whether the last line requires a terminating new-line character is implementation-defined.
The scanf("%[^\n]", line) has the specifier "%[^\n]". It scans for unlimited number of characters that match the scan-set ^\n. If none are read, the specifier fails and scanf() returns with line unaltered. If at least one character is read, all matching characters are read and saved and a null character is appended.
The scan-set ^\n implies all character that are not (due to the '^') '\n'.
'\n' is not read
scanf("%[^\n]",.... fails to read a new line character '\n'. It remains in stdin. The entire line is not read.
Buffer overflow
The below leads to undefined behavior (UB) should more than 99 characters get read.
char line[100];
scanf("%[^\n]",line); // buffer overflow possible
Does nothing on empty line
When the line consists of only "\n", scanf("%[^\n]",line); returns a 0 without setting line[] - no null character is appended. This can readily lead to undefined behavior should subsequent code use an uninitialized line[]. The '\n' remains in stdin.
Failure to check the return value
scanf("%[^\n]",line); assumes input succeeded. Better code would check the scanf() return value.
Recommendation
Do not use scanf() and instead use fgets() to read a line of input.
#define EXPECTED_INPUT_LENGTH_MAX 49
char line[EXPECTED_INPUT_LENGTH_MAX + 1 + 1 + 1];
// \n + \0 + extra to detect overly long lines
if (fgets(line, sizeof line, stdin)) {
size_t len = strlen(line);
// Lop off potential trailing \n if desired.
if (len > 0 && line[len-1] == '\n') {
line[--len] = '\0';
}
if (len > EXPECTED_INPUT_LENGTH_MAX) {
// Handle error
// Usually includes reading rest of line if \n not found.
}
The fgets() approach has it limitations too. e.g. (reading embedded null characters).
Handling user input, possible hostile, is challenging.
Solution 2:[2]
scanf("%[^\n]",line);
means: scan till \n or an enter key.
Solution 3:[3]
scanf("%[^\n]",line);
Will read user input until enter is pressed or a newline character is added (\n) and store it into a variable named line.
Solution 4:[4]
Question: what is %[^\n] mean in C?
Basically the
\ncommand prints the output in the next line, but in case of C gives theNulldata followed by the above problem only.Because of that to remove the unwanted data or null data, need to add Complement/negotiated symbol
[^\n]. It gives all characters until the next line and keeps the data in the defined expression.Means it is the Complemented data or rewritten data from the trash
EX:
char number[100]; //defined a character ex: StackOverflow
scanf("%[^\n]",number); //defining the number without this statement, the
character number gives the unwanted stuff `???`
printf("HI\n"); //normaly use of printf statement
printf("%s",number); //printing the output
return 0;
Sources
This article follows the attribution requirements of Stack Overflow and is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.
Source: Stack Overflow
| Solution | Source |
|---|---|
| Solution 1 | |
| Solution 2 | vitaly-t |
| Solution 3 | Bill Wang |
| Solution 4 | JAGANNADAN MANASA |
