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Date:      Sun, 20 Apr 2003 00:00:17 +0300
From:      Enache Adrian <enache@rdslink.ro>
To:        current@freebsd.org
Cc:        das@freebsd.org
Subject:   recent bug in printf ?
Message-ID:  <20030419210017.GA1263@ratsnest.hole>

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$ gcc -x c - && ./a.out
#include <stdio.h>

int main()
{
   printf("%.*g\n",8,0.00009);
}
^D
9.0000000e-05

It appears that all others printf implementations will print '9e-05' there.
It's at least what perl expects ( for its Gconvert() macro - and badly
fails a lot of tests because of this ).

The sprintf(3) man page claims:

     gG      The double argument is converted in style f or e (or F or E for G
             conversions).  The precision specifies the number of significant
             digits.  If the precision is missing, 6 digits are given; if the
             precision is zero, it is treated as 1.  Style e is used if the
             exponent from its conversion is less than -4 or greater than or
             equal to the precision.  Trailing zeros are removed from the
             fractional part of the result; a decimal point appears only if it
             is followed by at least one digit.

Should I understand that the zeros in 9.0000000e-05 aren't trailing -
because the exponent follows them ?

I use -CURRENT cvsup'ed 4-5 days ago.

Regards
Adi



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