Speed Test    Top 25 Hosts    Hosting Reviews    100 Hosts
GalaxyVisions - Ultimate Web Hosting Solutions

Dedicated servers
& web hosting directory

Advance Search    Dedicated Servers   Company Name   HostMatch
Thank you for visiting this site. If you are looking for web hosting services, you have come to the right place. Please search my database of over 2400 hosting companies.

If you need any help, please email me at terence @ hostpulse.com . I will personally try to reply your email within a day and give you some basic guidelines, negotiate with a few hosts to offer you good pricing or answer any hosting related problems that you may have. 
Cheap Web Hosting ASP & ASP.Net Hosting

Dedicated Server

Windows Server Hosting Ecommerce Hosting PHP Hosting
Linux & Unix Hosting Cold Fusion Hosting South America
Europe Reseller Hosting Managed Hosting
Virtual Private Server Asia Pacific Search by Country

Reference and Manual


Hosting Glossary  PHP  HTML 4.01  CSS 2.0  Core Javascript 1.5  XHTML 1.0

sprintf

sprintf

(PHP 3, PHP 4 , PHP 5)

sprintf -- Return a formatted string

Description

string sprintf ( string format [, mixed args [, mixed ...]])

Returns a string produced according to the formatting string format.

The format string is composed of zero or more directives: ordinary characters (excluding %) that are copied directly to the result, and conversion specifications, each of which results in fetching its own parameter. This applies to both sprintf() and printf().

Each conversion specification consists of a percent sign (%), followed by one or more of these elements, in order:

  1. An optional sign specifier that forces a sign (- or +) to be used on a number. By default, only the - sign is used on a number if it's negative. This specifier forces positive numbers to have the + sign attached as well, and was added in PHP 4.3.0.

  2. An optional padding specifier that says what character will be used for padding the results to the right string size. This may be a space character or a 0 (zero character). The default is to pad with spaces. An alternate padding character can be specified by prefixing it with a single quote ('). See the examples below.

  3. An optional alignment specifier that says if the result should be left-justified or right-justified. The default is right-justified; a - character here will make it left-justified.

  4. An optional number, a width specifier that says how many characters (minimum) this conversion should result in.

  5. An optional precision specifier that says how many decimal digits should be displayed for floating-point numbers. When using this specifier on a string, it acts as a cutoff point, setting a maximum character limit to the string.

  6. A type specifier that says what type the argument data should be treated as. Possible types:

    % - a literal percent character. No argument is required.
    b - the argument is treated as an integer, and presented as a binary number.
    c - the argument is treated as an integer, and presented as the character with that ASCII value.
    d - the argument is treated as an integer, and presented as a (signed) decimal number.
    e - the argument is treated as scientific notation (e.g. 1.2e+2).
    u - the argument is treated as an integer, and presented as an unsigned decimal number.
    f - the argument is treated as a float, and presented as a floating-point number.
    o - the argument is treated as an integer, and presented as an octal number.
    s - the argument is treated as and presented as a string.
    x - the argument is treated as an integer and presented as a hexadecimal number (with lowercase letters).
    X - the argument is treated as an integer and presented as a hexadecimal number (with uppercase letters).

As of PHP 4.0.6 the format string supports argument numbering/swapping. Here is an example:

Example 1. Argument swapping

<?php
$format
= "There are %d monkeys in the %s";
printf($format, $num, $location);
?>
This might output, "There are 5 monkeys in the tree". But imagine we are creating a format string in a separate file, commonly because we would like to internationalize it and we rewrite it as:

Example 2. Argument swapping

<?php
$format
= "The %s contains %d monkeys";
printf($format, $num, $location);
?>
We now have a problem. The order of the placeholders in the format string does not match the order of the arguments in the code. We would like to leave the code as is and simply indicate in the format string which arguments the placeholders refer to. We would write the format string like this instead:

Example 3. Argument swapping

<?php
$format
= "The %2\$s contains %1\$d monkeys";
printf($format, $num, $location);
?>
An added benefit here is that you can repeat the placeholders without adding more arguments in the code. For example:

Example 4. Argument swapping

<?php
$format
= "The %2\$s contains %1\$d monkeys.
           That's a nice %2\$s full of %1\$d monkeys."
;
printf($format, $num, $location);
?>

See also printf(), sscanf(), fscanf(), vsprintf(), and number_format().

Examples

Example 5. printf(): various examples

<?php
$n
=  43951789;
$u = -43951789;
$c = 65; // ASCII 65 is 'A'

// notice the double %%, this prints a literal '%' character
printf("%%b = '%b'\n", $n); // binary representation
printf("%%c = '%c'\n", $c); // print the ascii character, same as chr() function
printf("%%d = '%d'\n", $n); // standard integer representation
printf("%%e = '%e'\n", $n); // scientific notation
printf("%%u = '%u'\n", $n); // unsigned integer representation of a positive integer
printf("%%u = '%u'\n", $u); // unsigned integer representation of a negative integer
printf("%%f = '%f'\n", $n); // floating point representation
printf("%%o = '%o'\n", $n); // octal representation
printf("%%s = '%s'\n", $n); // string representation
printf("%%x = '%x'\n", $n); // hexadecimal representation (lower-case)
printf("%%X = '%X'\n", $n); // hexadecimal representation (upper-case)

printf("%%+d = '%+d'\n", $n); // sign specifier on a positive integer
printf("%%+d = '%+d'\n", $u); // sign specifier on a negative integer
?>

The printout of this program would be:

%b = '10100111101010011010101101'
%c = 'A'
%d = '43951789'
%e = '4.39518e+7'
%u = '43951789'
%u = '4251015507'
%f = '43951789.000000'
%o = '247523255'
%s = '43951789'
%x = '29ea6ad'
%X = '29EA6AD'
%+d = '+43951789'
%+d = '-43951789'

Example 6. printf(): string specifiers

<?php
$s
= 'monkey';
$t = 'many monkeys';

printf("[%s]\n",      $s); // standard string output
printf("[%10s]\n",    $s); // right-justification with spaces
printf("[%-10s]\n",   $s); // left-justification with spaces
printf("[%010s]\n",   $s); // zero-padding works on strings too
printf("[%'#10s]\n",  $s); // use the custom padding character '#'
printf("[%10.10s]\n", $t); // left-justification but with a cutoff of 10 characters
?>

The printout of this program would be:

[monkey]
[    monkey]
[monkey    ]
[0000monkey]
[####monkey]
[many monke]

Example 7. sprintf(): zero-padded integers

<?php
$isodate
= sprintf("%04d-%02d-%02d", $year, $month, $day);
?>

Example 8. sprintf(): formatting currency

<?php
$money1
= 68.75;
$money2 = 54.35;
$money = $money1 + $money2;
// echo $money will output "123.1";
$formatted = sprintf("%01.2f", $money);
// echo $formatted will output "123.10"
?>

Example 9. sprintf(): scientific notation

<?php
$number
= 362525200;

echo
sprintf("%.3e", $number); // outputs 3.63e+8
?>

Web Hosting Showcase
View the web hosting showcase to find more relevant web hosting choice that will guide you in selecting a good web hosting company.
 

GalaxyVisions - Ultimate Web Hosting Solutions Cheap Web Hosting ASP & ASP.Net Hosting Dedicated Servers
Windows 2000 & 2003 Server Hosting Ecommerce Hosting PHP Hosting
Linux & Unix Hosting Cold Fusion Hosting South America
Europe Reseller Hosting Managed Hosting
Virtual Private Server Asia Pacific  

Web Hosting and Development Tools

Network Tools  Download Template  Programming Manuals  Developer Tools

  




Net Host Tools

Feature Host







This site provide free reviews of web hosting services from 100 selected companies. There are over 3000 over website hosting companies on the internet. Please research these domain hosting services carefully before you sign up with any. Read articles on web page hosting, web site hosting, domain names, website speed test, cheap web hosting services, PHP scripts, mysql database, asp hosting and virtual private server to gain a better knowledge on domain hosting and cheap web hosting.



Learn more about us
About HostPulse
Contact Us Terms of Use


©2011
All rights reserved.

Questions? Comments? Get started
Affordable Advertising | Host Login & Register
Submission
Submit a news |
Web Hosting and Development Tools
Network Tools  Download Template  Programming Manuals  Search by Country   Links to other sites