Since ANSI C99 there is _Bool
or bool
via stdbool.h
. But is there also a printf
format specifier for bool?
I mean something like in that pseudo code:
bool x = true;
printf("%B\n", x);
which would print:
true
Since ANSI C99 there is _Bool
or bool
via stdbool.h
. But is there also a printf
format specifier for bool?
I mean something like in that pseudo code:
bool x = true;
printf("%B\n", x);
which would print:
true
There isn't. But since any integral type shorter than int
is promoted to int
when passed down to printf()
s variadic arguments, you can use %d
:
bool x = true;
printf("%d\n", x); // prints 1
But why not
printf(x ? "true" : "false");
or better
printf("%s", x ? "true" : "false");
or even better
fputs(x ? "true" : "false", stdout);
instead?
There is no format specifier for bool. You can print it using some of the existing specifiers for printing integral types or do something more fancy:
printf("%s", x?"true":"false");
ANSI C99/C11 don't include an extra printf conversion specifier for bool
.
But the GNU C library provides an API for adding custom specifiers.
An example:
#include <stdio.h>
#include <printf.h>
#include <stdbool.h>
static int bool_arginfo(const struct printf_info *info, size_t n,
int *argtypes, int *size)
{
if (n) {
argtypes[0] = PA_INT;
*size = sizeof(bool);
}
return 1;
}
static int bool_printf(FILE *stream, const struct printf_info *info,
const void *const *args)
{
bool b = *(const bool*)(args[0]);
int r = fputs(b ? "true" : "false", stream);
return r == EOF ? -1 : (b ? 4 : 5);
}
static int setup_bool_specifier()
{
int r = register_printf_specifier('B', bool_printf, bool_arginfo);
return r;
}
int main(int argc, char **argv)
{
int r = setup_bool_specifier();
if (r) return 1;
bool b = argc > 1;
r = printf("The result is: %B\n", b);
printf("(written %d characters)\n", r);
return 0;
}
Since it is a glibc extensions the GCC warns about that custom specifier:
$ gcc -Wall -g main.c -o main main.c: In function ‘main’: main.c:34:3: warning: unknown conversion type character ‘B’ in format [-Wformat=] r = printf("The result is: %B\n", b); ^ main.c:34:3: warning: too many arguments for format [-Wformat-extra-args]
Output:
$ ./main The result is: false (written 21 characters) $ ./main 1 The result is: true (written 20 characters)
In the tradition of itoa()
:
#define btoa(x) ((x)?"true":"false")
bool x = true;
printf("%s\n", btoa(x));
You can't, but you can print 0 or 1
_Bool b = 1;
printf("%d\n", b);
source
I prefer an answer from Best way to print the result of a bool as 'false' or 'true' in c?, just like
printf("%s\n", "false\0true"+6*x);
To just print 1 or 0 based on the boolean value I just used:
printf("%d\n", !!(42));
Especially useful with Flags:
#define MY_FLAG (1 << 4)
int flags = MY_FLAG;
printf("%d\n", !!(flags & MY_FLAG));
If you like C++ better than C, you can try this:
#include <ios>
#include <iostream>
bool b = IsSomethingTrue();
std::cout << std::boolalpha << b;