views:

211

answers:

7

Is there a way to specify how many characters of a string to print out (similar to decimal places in ints)

printf ("Here are the first 8 chars: %s\n", "A string that is more than 8 chars");

Would like it to print: "Here are the first 8 chars:A string"

+3  A: 

printf(....."%.8s")

pm100
+4  A: 
printf ("Here are the first 8 chars: %.8s\n", "A string that is more than 8 chars");

%8s would specify a minimum width of 8 characters. You want to truncate at 8, so use %.8s.

If you want to always print exactly 8 characters you could use %8.8s

developmentalinsanity
+1  A: 

In C++ it is easy.

std::copy(someStr.c_str(), someStr.c_str()+n, std::ostream_iterator<char>(std::cout, ""));

EDIT: It is also safer to use this with string iterators, so you don't run off the end. I'm not sure what happens with printf and string that are too short, but I'm guess this may be safer.

Chris H
ha, yeah that's "easy". C++ always looks like car accident.
GregS
you still can do printf() in c++ :)
StasM
I think this was sarcasm. `std::cout << someStr.substr(0,8);` is far more obvious.
MSalters
+19  A: 

The basic way is:

printf ("Here are the first 8 chars: %.8s\n", "A string that is more than 8 chars");

The other, often more useful, way is:

printf ("Here are the first %d chars: %.*s\n", 8, 8, "A string that is more than 8 chars");

Here, you specify the length as an int argument to printf(), which treats the '*' in the format as a request to get the length from an argument.

You can also use the notation:

printf ("Here are the first 8 chars: %*.*s\n",
        8, 8, "A string that is more than 8 chars");

This is also analogous to the "%8.8s" notation, but again allows you to specify the minimum and maximum lengths at runtime - more realistically in a scenario like:

printf("Data: %*.*s Other info: %d\n", minlen, maxlen, string, info);
Jonathan Leffler
+2  A: 

Using printf you can do

printf("Here are the first 8 chars: %.8s\n", "A string that is more than 8 chars");

If you're using C++, you can achieve the same result using the STL:

using namespace std; // for clarity
string s("A string that is more than 8 chars");
cout << "Here are the first 8 chars: ";
copy(s.begin(), s.begin() + 8, ostream_iterator<char>(cout));
cout << endl;

Or, less efficiently:

cout << "Here are the first 8 chars: " <<
        string(s.begin(), s.begin() + 8) << endl;
Peter Alexander
+2  A: 

In addition to specify a fixed amount of characters, you can also use * which means that printf takes the number of characters from an argument:

#include <stdio.h>

int main(int argc, char *argv[])
{
        const char hello[] = "Hello world";
        printf("message: '%.3s'\n", hello);
        printf("message: '%.*s'\n", 3, hello);
        printf("message: '%.*s'\n", 5, hello);
        return 0;
}

Prints:

message: 'Hel'
message: 'Hel'
message: 'Hello'
hlovdal
+2  A: 

Print first four characters:

printf("%.4s\n", "A string that is more than 8 chars");

See this link for more information (check .precision -section)

Anssi