In C, Printing to stdout is easy, with printf
from stdio.h
.
However, how can print to stderr? We can use fprintf
to achieve it apparently, but its syntax seems strange. Maybe we can use printf
to print to stderr?
In C, Printing to stdout is easy, with printf
from stdio.h
.
However, how can print to stderr? We can use fprintf
to achieve it apparently, but its syntax seems strange. Maybe we can use printf
to print to stderr?
The syntax is almost the same as printf
. With printf
you give the string format and its contents ie:
printf("my %s has %d chars\n", "string format", 30);
With fprintf
it is the same, except now you are also specifying the place to print to:
File *myFile;
...
fprintf( myFile, "my %s has %d chars\n", "string format", 30);
Or in your case:
fprintf( stderr, "my %s has %d chars\n", "string format", 30);
Examples:
printf("%s", "Hello world\n"); // "Hello world" on stdout (using printf)
fprintf(stdout, "%s", "Hello world\n"); // "Hello world" on stdout (using fprintf)
fprintf(stderr, "%s", "Stack overflow!\n"); // Error message on stderr (using fprintf)
#include<stdio.h>
int main ( ) {
printf( "hello " );
fprintf( stderr, "HELP!" );
printf( " world\n" );
return 0;
}
$ ./a.exe
HELP!hello world
$ ./a.exe 2> tmp1
hello world
$ ./a.exe 1> tmp1
HELP!$
stderr is usually unbuffered and stdout usually is. This can lead to odd looking output like this, which suggests code is executing in the wrong order. It isn't, it's just that the stdout buffer has yet to be flushed. Redirected or piped streams would of course not see this interleave as they would normally only see the output of stdout only or stderr only.
Although initially both stdout and stderr come to the console, both are separate and can be individually redirected.
Do you know sprintf
? It's basically the same thing with fprintf
. The first argument is the destination (the file in the case of fprintf
i.e. stderr
), the second argument is the format string, and the rest are the arguments as usual.
I also recommend this printf
(and family) reference.
If you don't want to modify current codes and just for debug usage.
Add this macro:
#define printf(args...) fprintf(stderr, ##args)
//under GCC
#define printf(args...) fprintf(stderr, __VA_ARGS__)
//under MSVC
Change stderr
to stdout
if you want to roll back.
It's helpful for debug, but it's not a good practice.
To print your context ,you can write code like this :
FILE *fp;
char *of;
sprintf(of,"%s%s",text1,text2);
fp=fopen(of,'w');
fprintf(fp,"your print line");