How do I print a non-null-terminated string using printf?
Solution 1:
printf("%.*s", length, string);
Use together with other args:
printf("integer=%d, string=%.*s, number=%f", integer, length, string, number);
// ^^^^ ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
In C you could specify the maximum length to output with the %.123s
format. This means the output length is at most 123 chars. The 123
could be replaced by *
, so that the length will be taken from the argument of printf instead of hard-coded.
Note that this assumes the string
does not contain any interior null bytes (\0), as %.123s
only constrains the maximum length not the exact length, and strings are still treated as null-terminated.
If you want to print a non-null-terminated string with interior null, you cannot use a single printf. Use fwrite
instead:
fwrite(string, 1, length, stdout);
See @M.S.Dousti's answer for detailed explanation.
Solution 2:
The answer provided by @KennyTM is great, but with a subtlety.
In general, if the string is non-null "terminated", but has a null character in the middle, printf("%.*s", length, string);
does not work as expected. This is because the %.*s
format string asks printf
to print a maximum of length
characters, not exactly length
characters.
I'd rather use the more general solution pointed out by @William Pursell in a comment under the OP:
fwrite(string, sizeof(char), length, stdout);
Here's a sample code:
#include <stdio.h>
int main(void) {
size_t length = 5;
char string[length];
string[0] = 'A';
string[1] = 'B';
string[2] = 0; // null character in the middle
string[3] = 'C';
string[4] = 'D';
printf("With printf: %.*s\n", length, string);
printf("With fwrite: ");
fwrite(string, sizeof(char), length, stdout);
printf("\n");
return 0;
}
Output:
With printf: AB
With fwrite: AB CD