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ALX 0x11. C - printf (ALX printf)

This is a ALX group project made by Fasakin Henry and Segun

Introduction

  • Category: Low level Programming language
  • Programming Language: ANSI C
  • Weight: 5;
  • Given By: Julien Barbier, co-founder and CEO
  • Project date: Sep 15, 2023 6:00 AM - Sep 20, 2023 6:00 AM

concepts

Kris and Jul picture

^In this picture, Kris and Jul</>

Write your Own Printf function

Resources

man or help

printf (3)

Requirements

General

  • Allowed editors: vi, vim, emacs
  • All your files will be compiled on Ubuntu 20.04 LTS using gcc, using the options -Wall -Werror -Wextra -pedantic -std=gnu89
  • All your files should end with a new line
  • A README.md file, at the root of the folder of the project is mandatory
  • Your code should use the Betty style. It will be checked using bettystyle.pl and bettydoc.pl
  • You are not allowed to use global variables
  • No more than 5 functions per file
  • In the following examples, the main.c files are shown as examples. You can use them to test your functions, but you don’t have to push them to your repo (if you do we won’t take them into account). We will use our own main.c files at compilation. Our main.c files might be different from the one shown in the examples
  • The prototypes of all your functions should be included in your header file called main.h
  • Don’t forget to push your header file
  • All your header files should be include guarded
  • Note that we will not provide the _putchar function for this project

GitHub

There should be one project repository per group. The other members do not fork or clone the project to ensure only one of the team has the repository in their github account otherwise you risk scoring 0%

More Info

Authorized functions and macro

write (man 2 write)
malloc (man 3 malloc)
free (man 3 free)
va_start (man 3 va_start)
va_end (man 3 va_end)
va_copy (man 3 va_copy)
va_arg (man 3 va_arg)

Compilation

  • Your code will be compiled in this way
gcc -Wall -Werror -Wextra -pedantic -std=gnu89 *.c </code>
  • As a consequence, be careful not to push any c file containing a main function in the root directory of your project (you could have a test folder containing all your tests files including main functions)
  • Our main files will include your main header file (main.h): #include main.h
  • You might want to look at the gcc flag -Wno-format when testing with your _printf and the standard printf. Example of test file that you could use:
alex@ubuntu:~/c/printf$ cat main.c 
 #include <limits.h>
 #include <stdio.h>
 #include "main.h"

 /**
 * main - Entry point
 *
 * Return: Always 0
 */
 int main(void)
 {
 int len;
 int len2;
 unsigned int ui;
 void *addr;

 len = _printf("Let's try to printf a simple sentence.\n");
 len2 = printf("Let's try to printf a simple sentence.\n");
 ui = (unsigned int)INT_MAX + 1024;
 addr = (void *)0x7ffe637541f0;
 _printf("Length:[%d, %i]\n", len, len);
 printf("Length:[%d, %i]\n", len2, len2);
 _printf("Negative:[%d]\n", -762534);
 printf("Negative:[%d]\n", -762534);
 _printf("Unsigned:[%u]\n", ui);
 printf("Unsigned:[%u]\n", ui);
 _printf("Unsigned octal:[%o]\n", ui);
 printf("Unsigned octal:[%o]\n", ui);
 _printf("Unsigned hexadecimal:[%x, %X]\n", ui, ui);
 printf("Unsigned hexadecimal:[%x, %X]\n", ui, ui);
 _printf("Character:[%c]\n", 'H');
 printf("Character:[%c]\n", 'H');
 _printf("String:[%s]\n", "I am a string !");
 printf("String:[%s]\n", "I am a string !");
 _printf("Address:[%p]\n", addr);
 printf("Address:[%p]\n", addr);
 len = _printf("Percent:[%%]\n");
 len2 = printf("Percent:[%%]\n");
 _printf("Len:[%d]\n", len);
 printf("Len:[%d]\n", len2);
 _printf("Unknown:[%r]\n");
 printf("Unknown:[%r]\n");
 return (0);
 }
 alex@ubuntu:~/c/printf$ gcc -Wall -Wextra -Werror -pedantic -std=gnu89 -Wno-format *.c
 alex@ubuntu:~/c/printf$ ./printf
 Let's try to printf a simple sentence.
 Let's try to printf a simple sentence.
 Length:[39, 39]
 Length:[39, 39]
 Negative:[-762534]
 Negative:[-762534]
 Unsigned:[2147484671]
 Unsigned:[2147484671]
 Unsigned octal:[20000001777]
 Unsigned octal:[20000001777]
 Unsigned hexadecimal:[800003ff, 800003FF]
 Unsigned hexadecimal:[800003ff, 800003FF]
 Character:[H]
 Character:[H]
 String:[I am a string !]
 String:[I am a string !]
 Address:[0x7ffe637541f0]
 Address:[0x7ffe637541f0
 Percent:[%]
 Percent:[%]
 Len:[12]
 Len:[12]
 Unknown:[%r]
 Unknown:[%r]
 alex@ubuntu:~/c/printf$
  • We strongly encourage you to work all together on a set of tests
  • If the task does not specify what to do with an edge case, do the same as printf

Copyright - Plagiarism

  • You are tasked to come up with solutions for the tasks below yourself to meet with the above learning objectives.
  • You will not be able to meet the objectives of this or any following project by copying and pasting someone else’s work.
  • You are not allowed to publish any content of this project.
  • Any form of plagiarism is strictly forbidden and will result in removal from the program.

Tasks

  1. I'm not going anywhere. You can print that wherever you want to. I'm here and I'm a Spur for life
  2. Education is when you read the fine print. Experience is what you get if you don't
  3. With a face like mine, I do better in print
  4. What one has not experienced, one will never understand in print
  5. Nothing in fine print is ever good news
  6. My weakness is wearing too much leopard print
  7. How is the world ruled and led to war? Diplomats lie to journalists and believe these lies when they see them in print
  8. The big print gives and the small print takes away
  9. Sarcasm is lost in print
  10. Print some money and give it to us for the rain forests
  11. The negative is the equivalent of the composer's score, and the print the performance
  12. It's depressing when you're still around and your albums are out of print
  13. Every time that I wanted to give up, if I saw an interesting textile, print what ever, suddenly I would see a collection
  14. Print is the sharpest and the strongest weapon of our party
  15. The flood of print has turned reading into a process of gulping rather than savoring
  16. All the above options work well together.

Task 0

Write a function that produces output according to a format.

Prototype: int _printf(const char *format, ...); Returns: the number of characters printed (excluding the null byte used to end output to strings) write output to stdout, the standard output stream format is a character string. The format string is composed of zero or more directives. See man 3 printf for more detail. You need to handle the following conversion specifiers:

* c
* s
* %

You don’t have to reproduce the buffer handling of the C library printf function You don’t have to handle the flag characters You don’t have to handle field width You don’t have to handle precision You don’t have to handle the length modifiers

Task 1

Handle the following conversion specifiers:

  • d
  • i
  • You don’t have to handle the flag characters
  • You don’t have to handle field width
  • You don’t have to handle precision
  • You don’t have to handle the length modifiers

Task 2

Handle the following custom conversion specifiers:

  • b: the unsigned int argument is converted to binary
alex@ubuntu:~/c/printf$ cat main.c
#include "main.h"

/**
 * main - Entry point
 *
 * Return: Always 0
 */
int main(void)
{
    _printf("%b\n", 98);
    return (0);
}
alex@ubuntu:~/c/printf$ gcc -Wall -Wextra -Werror -pedantic -std=gnu89 main.c
alex@ubuntu:~/c/printf$ ./a.out
1100010
alex@ubuntu:~/c/printf$

Task 3

Handle the following conversion specifiers:

  • u
  • o
  • x
  • X
  • You don’t have to handle the flag characters
  • You don’t have to handle field width
  • You don’t have to handle precision
  • You don’t have to handle the length modifiers

Task 4

Use a local buffer of 1024 chars in order to call write as little as possible.

Task 5

Handle the following custom conversion specifier:

  • S : prints the string.
  • Non printable characters (0 < ASCII value < 32 or >= 127) are printed this way: \x, followed by the ASCII code value in hexadecimal (upper case - always 2 characters)

Task 6

Handle the following conversion specifier: p.

  • You don’t have to handle the flag characters
  • You don’t have to handle field width
  • You don’t have to handle precision
  • You don’t have to handle the length modifiers

Task 7

Handle the following flag characters for non-custom conversion specifiers:

  • +
  • space
  • "#"

Task 8

Handle the following length modifiers for non-custom conversion specifiers:

  • l
  • h
  • Conversion specifiers to handle: d, i, u, o, x, X

Task 9

Handle the field width for non-custom conversion specifiers.

Task 10

Handle the precision for non-custom conversion specifiers.

Task 11

Handle the 0 flag character for non-custom conversion specifiers.

Task 12

Handle the - flag character for non-custom conversion specifiers.

Task 13

Handle the following custom conversion specifier:

  • r : prints the reversed string

Task 14

Handle the following custom conversion specifier:

  • R: prints the rot13'ed string

Task 15

All the above options work well together.

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