Allow scanf to continue parsing format string after a '%n'.

oldstable
C. Scott Ananian 2005-03-10 11:44:19 +00:00 committed by Alexandre Julliard
parent 5f033b88d4
commit 9ef2706a77
2 changed files with 21 additions and 0 deletions

View File

@ -427,6 +427,19 @@ _FUNCTION_ {
int*n = va_arg(ap, int*);
*n = consumed - (nch!=_EOF_);
}
/* This is an odd one: according to the standard,
* "Execution of a %n directive does not increment the
* assignment count returned at the completion of
* execution" even if it wasn't suppressed with the
* '*' flag. The Corrigendum to the standard seems
* to contradict this (comment out the assignment to
* suppress below if you want to implement these
* alternate semantics) but the windows program I'm
* looking at expects the behavior I've coded here
* (which happens to be what glibc does as well).
*/
suppress = 1;
st = 1;
}
break;
case '[': {

View File

@ -117,6 +117,14 @@ static void test_sscanf( void )
ok(hour == 18, "Field 1 incorrect: %d\n", hour);
ok(min == 59, "Field 2 incorrect: %d\n", min);
ok(c == 0x55, "Field 3 incorrect: 0x%02x\n", c);
/* Check %n (also whitespace in format strings and %s) */
buffer[0]=0; buffer1[0]=0;
ret = sscanf("abc def", "%s %n%s", buffer, &number_so_far, buffer1);
ok(strcmp(buffer, "abc")==0, "First %%s read incorrectly: %s\n", buffer);
ok(strcmp(buffer1,"def")==0, "Second %%s read incorrectly: %s\n", buffer1);
ok(number_so_far==6, "%%n yielded wrong result: %d\n", number_so_far);
ok(ret == 2, "%%n shouldn't count as a conversion: %d\n", ret);
}
START_TEST(scanf)