PHP 8.4.0 RC4 available for testing

printf

(PHP 4, PHP 5, PHP 7, PHP 8)

printfVisualizza una stringa formattata

Descrizione

printf(string $format, mixed $args = ?, mixed $... = ?): int

Produce un output formattato secondo le specifiche del parametro format, che viene descritto nella documentazione di sprintf().

Restituisce la lunghezza della stringa visualizzata.

Vedere anche print, sprintf(), vprintf(), sscanf(), fscanf() e flush().

add a note

User Contributed Notes 7 notes

up
21
dhosek at excite dot com
24 years ago
Be careful:
printf ("(9.95 * 100) = %d \n", (9.95 * 100));

'994'

First %d converts a float to an int by truncation.

Second floats are notorious for tiny little rounding errors.
up
7
php at mole dot gnubb dot net
19 years ago
[Editor's Note: Or just use vprintf...]

If you want to do something like <?php printf('There is a difference between %s and %s', array('good', 'evil')); ?> (this doesn't work) instead of <?php printf('There is a difference between %s and %s', 'good', 'evil'); ?> you can use this function:

<?php
function printf_array($format, $arr)
{
return
call_user_func_array('printf', array_merge((array)$format, $arr));
}
?>

Use it the following way:
<?php
$goodevil
= array('good', 'evil');
printf_array('There is a difference between %s and %s', $goodevil);
?>
and it will print:
There is a difference between good and evil
up
1
simon dot patrick at cantab dot net
2 months ago
A few things to note about printf:
1. The definition of specifier g (or G) is often wrongly stated as being "use e or f (or E or f), whichever results in the shorter string". The correct rule is given in the documentation and it does not always give this result.
2. For g/G/h/H, trailing zeros after the decimal point are removed (but not a zero just after the decimal point, in the e/E style).
3. g/G are locale-aware whether the e/E or f style is produced.
4. For b/o/x/X/u (that is, all integer styles except d) the result shown for negative values is the twos complement form of the number, 2**32 + v, where v is the (negative) value.
up
0
Mario M. Junior
2 years ago
To provide a more user-friendly interface, you can use colors when printing text in the terminal.

p('Ordinary text.');
p('Warning: Check this out...', 'info');
p('Ops! Something went wrong.', 'error');
p('Yeah... done!', 'success');

function p($text, $style = '', $newLine = true) {

$styles = array(
'success' => "\033[0;32m%s\033[0m",
'error' => "\033[31;31m%s\033[0m",
'info' => "\033[33;33m%s\033[0m",

'Black' => "\033[0;30m%s\033[0m",
'Red' => "\033[0;31m%s\033[0m",
'Green' => "\033[0;32m%s\033[0m",
'Yellow' => "\033[0;33m%s\033[0m",
'Blue' => "\033[0;34m%s\033[0m",
'Purple' => "\033[0;35m%s\033[0m",
'Cyan' => "\033[0;36m%s\033[0m",
'Gray' => "\033[0;37m%s\033[0m",
'Graphite' => "\033[1;30m%s\033[0m",

'Bold Red' => "\033[1;31m%s\033[0m",
'Bold Green' => "\033[1;32m%s\033[0m",
'Bold Yellow' => "\033[1;33m%s\033[0m",
'Bold Blue' => "\033[1;34m%s\033[0m",
'Bold Purple' => "\033[1;35m%s\033[0m",
'Bold Cyan' => "\033[1;36m%s\033[0m",
'Bold White' => "\033[1;37m%s\033[0m",

'Bg Black' => "\033[40;1;37m%s\033[0m",
'Bg Red' => "\033[41;1;37m%s\033[0m",
'Bg Green' => "\033[42;1;37m%s\033[0m",
'Bg Yellow' => "\033[43;1;37m%s\033[0m",
'Bg Blue' => "\033[44;1;37m%s\033[0m",
'Bg Purple' => "\033[45;1;37m%s\033[0m",
'Bg Cyan' => "\033[46;1;37m%s\033[0m",
'Bg Gray' => "\033[47;1;37m%s\033[0m",

'Underscore' => "\033[4;37m%s\033[0m",
'Inverted' => "\033[7;37m%s\033[0m",
'Blink' => "\033[5;37m%s\033[0m",
);

$format = '%s';

if (isset($styles[$style])) {
$format = $styles[$style];
}

if ($newLine) {
$format .= PHP_EOL;
}

printf($format, $text);
}
up
0
maybird99 at yahoo dot com
22 years ago
instead of writing a function to round off a float (let's call it 'x') accurately, it's much easier to add a small number to x and then truncate it...
For example: if you want to round off to the nearest integer, just add 0.5 to x and then truncate it. if x=12.6, then it would calculate 13.1, and truncate it to 13. If x=14.4, it would calculate 14.9 and truncate it to 14.
up
0
deekayen at hotmail dot com
23 years ago
You can use this function to format the decimal places in a number:

$num = 2.12;
printf("%.1f",$num);

prints:

2.1

see also: number_format()
up
-4
steve at myschoolsystems dot com
3 years ago
To format a dollar value as in $123.00 that may otherwise look like $123 use this

print ('$'); // the dollar sign in front of our answer
printf ('%.2f',$price);
To Top