/printf

Writing our own printf function

Primary LanguageC

C - printf

  • Concepts For this project, we expect you to look at these concepts:

Group Projects

Pair Programming - How To Flowcharts Technical Writing

  • Resources Read or watch:

Secrets of printf

Group Projects concept page (Don’t forget to read this) Flowcharts concept page man or help:

printf (3)

Requirements

  • General Allowed editors: vi, vim, emacs All your files will be compiled on Ubuntu 20.04 LTS using gcc, using the options -Wall -Werror -Wextra -pedantic -std=gnu89 All your files should end with a new line A README.md file, at the root of the folder of the project is mandatory Your code should use the Betty style. It will be checked using betty-style.pl and betty-doc.pl You are not allowed to use global variables No more than 5 functions per file In the following examples, the main.c files are shown as examples. You can use them to test your functions, but you don’t have to push them to your repo (if you do we won’t take them into account). We will use our own main.c files at compilation. Our main.c files might be different from the one shown in the examples The prototypes of all your functions should be included in your header file called main.h Don’t forget to push your header file All your header files should be include guarded Note that we will not provide the _putchar function for this project GitHub

There should be one project repository per group.

Compilation Your code will be compiled this way: $ gcc -Wall -Werror -Wextra -pedantic -std=gnu89 *.c As a consequence, be careful not to push any c file containing a main function in the root directory of your project (you could have a test folder containing all your tests files including main functions) Our main files will include your main header file (main.h): #include main.h You might want to look at the gcc flag -Wno-format when testing with your _printf and the standard printf.