ldiv_t(3) - man - phpMan

Command: man perldoc info search(apropos)  


ldiv_t(3)
NAME DESCRIPTION NOTES EXAMPLES COLOPHON
SYSTEM_DATA_TYPES(7)                  Linux Programmer's Manual                 SYSTEM_DATA_TYPES(7)



NAME
       system_data_types - overview of system data types

DESCRIPTION
       aiocb
              Include: <aio.h>.

              struct aiocb {
                  int             aio_fildes;    /* File descriptor */
                  off_t           aio_offset;    /* File offset */
                  volatile void  *aio_buf;       /* Location of buffer */
                  size_t          aio_nbytes;    /* Length of transfer */
                  int             aio_reqprio;   /* Request priority offset */
                  struct sigevent aio_sigevent;  /* Signal number and value */
                  int             aio_lio_opcode;/* Operation to be performed */
              };

              For further information about this structure, see aio(7).

              Conforming to: POSIX.1-2001 and later.

              See  also:  aio_cancel(3),  aio_error(3),  aio_fsync(3),  aio_read(3),  aio_return(3),
              aio_suspend(3), aio_write(3), lio_listio(3)

       clock_t
              Include: <time.h> or <sys/types.h>.  Alternatively, <sys/time.h>.

              Used for system time in clock ticks or CLOCKS_PER_SEC (defined in <time.h>).   Accord‐
              ing to POSIX, it shall be an integer type or a real-floating type.

              Conforming to: C99 and later; POSIX.1-2001 and later.

              See also: times(2), clock(3)

       clockid_t
              Include: <sys/types.h>.  Alternatively, <time.h>.

              Used for clock ID type in the clock and timer functions.  According to POSIX, it shall
              be defined as an arithmetic type.

              Conforming to: POSIX.1-2001 and later.

              See  also:  clock_adjtime(2),  clock_getres(2),  clock_nanosleep(2),  timer_create(2),
              clock_getcpuclockid(3)

       dev_t
              Include: <sys/types.h>.  Alternatively, <sys/stat.h>.

              Used  for  device  IDs.  According to POSIX, it shall be an integer type.  For further
              details of this type, see makedev(3).

              Conforming to: POSIX.1-2001 and later.

              See also: mknod(2), stat(2)

       div_t
              Include: <stdlib.h>.

              typedef struct {
                  int quot; /* Quotient */
                  int rem;  /* Remainder */
              } div_t;

              It is the type of the value returned by the div(3) function.

              Conforming to: C99 and later; POSIX.1-2001 and later.

              See also: div(3)

       double_t
              Include: <math.h>.

              The implementation's most efficient floating type at least as  wide  as  double.   Its
              type depends on the value of the macro FLT_EVAL_METHOD (defined in <float.h>):

              0      double_t is double.

              1      double_t is double.

              2      double_t is long double.

              For other values of FLT_EVAL_METHOD, the type of double_t is implementation-defined.

              Conforming to: C99 and later; POSIX.1-2001 and later.

              See also: the float_t type in this page.

       fd_set
              Include: <sys/select.h>.  Alternatively, <sys/time.h>.

              A  structure  type  that can represent a set of file descriptors.  According to POSIX,
              the maximum number of file descriptors in an fd_set structure  is  the  value  of  the
              macro FD_SETSIZE.

              Conforming to: POSIX.1-2001 and later.

              See also: select(2)

       fenv_t
              Include: <fenv.h>.

              This  type  represents  the entire floating-point environment, including control modes
              and status flags; for further details, see fenv(3).

              Conforming to: C99 and later; POSIX.1-2001 and later.

              See also: fenv(3)

       fexcept_t
              Include: <fenv.h>.

              This type represents the floating-point status flags collectively; for further details
              see fenv(3).

              Conforming to: C99 and later; POSIX.1-2001 and later.

              See also: fenv(3)

       FILE
              Include: <stdio.h>.  Alternatively, <wchar.h>.

              An object type used for streams.

              Conforming to: C99 and later; POSIX.1-2001 and later.

              See   also:   fclose(3),  flockfile(3),  fopen(3),  fprintf(3),  fread(3),  fscanf(3),
              stdin(3), stdio(3)

       float_t
              Include: <math.h>.

              The implementation's most efficient floating type at least as wide as float.  Its type
              depends on the value of the macro FLT_EVAL_METHOD (defined in <float.h>):

              0      float_t is float.

              1      float_t is double.

              2      float_t is long double.

              For other values of FLT_EVAL_METHOD, the type of float_t is implementation-defined.

              Conforming to: C99 and later; POSIX.1-2001 and later.

              See also: the double_t type in this page.

       gid_t
              Include:  <sys/types.h>.   Alternatively,  <grp.h>,  <pwd.h>, <signal.h>, <stropts.h>,
              <sys/ipc.h>, <sys/stat.h>, or <unistd.h>.

              A type used to hold group IDs.  According to POSIX, this shall be an integer type.

              Conforming to: POSIX.1-2001 and later.

              See also: chown(2), getgid(2), getegid(2),  getgroups(2),  getresgid(2),  getgrnam(2),
              credentials(7)

       id_t
              Include: <sys/types.h>.  Alternatively, <sys/resource.h>.

              A  type used to hold a general identifier.  According to POSIX, this shall be an inte‐
              ger type that can be used to contain a pid_t, uid_t, or gid_t.

              Conforming to: POSIX.1-2001 and later.

              See also: getpriority(2), waitid(2)

       imaxdiv_t
              Include: <inttypes.h>.

              typedef struct {
                  intmax_t    quot; /* Quotient */
                  intmax_t    rem;  /* Remainder */
              } imaxdiv_t;

              It is the type of the value returned by the imaxdiv(3) function.

              Conforming to: C99 and later; POSIX.1-2001 and later.

              See also: imaxdiv(3)

       intmax_t
              Include: <stdint.h>.  Alternatively, <inttypes.h>.

              A signed integer type capable of representing any value of  any  signed  integer  type
              supported  by  the  implementation.  According to the C language standard, it shall be
              capable of storing values in the range [INTMAX_MIN, INTMAX_MAX].

              The macro INTMAX_C() expands its argument to an integer constant of type intmax_t.

              The length modifier for intmax_t for the printf(3) and the scanf(3) families of  func‐
              tions is j; resulting commonly in %jd or %ji for printing intmax_t values.

              Conforming to: C99 and later; POSIX.1-2001 and later.

              Bugs: intmax_t is not large enough to represent values of type __int128 in implementa‐
              tions where __int128 is defined and long long is less than 128 bits wide.

              See also: the uintmax_t type in this page.

       intN_t
              Include: <stdint.h>.  Alternatively, <inttypes.h>.

              int8_t, int16_t, int32_t, int64_t

              A signed integer type of a fixed width of exactly N bits, N being the value  specified
              in  its  type  name.   According  to the C language standard, they shall be capable of
              storing values in the range [INTN_MIN, INTN_MAX], substituting N  by  the  appropriate
              number.

              According  to  POSIX,  int8_t,  int16_t, and int32_t are required; int64_t is only re‐
              quired in implementations that provide integer types with  width  64;  and  all  other
              types of this form are optional.

              The  length  modifiers  for the intN_t types for the printf(3) family of functions are
              expanded by macros of the forms PRIdN and PRIiN (defined in  <inttypes.h>);  resulting
              for  example  in %"PRId64" or %"PRIi64" for printing int64_t values.  The length modi‐
              fiers for the intN_t types for the scanf(3) family of functions are expanded by macros
              of  the  forms  SCNdN  and  SCNiN, (defined in <inttypes.h>); resulting for example in
              %"SCNd8" or %"SCNi8" for scanning int8_t values.

              Conforming to: C99 and later; POSIX.1-2001 and later.

              See also: the intmax_t, uintN_t, and uintmax_t types in this page.

       intptr_t
              Include: <stdint.h>.  Alternatively, <inttypes.h>.

              A signed integer type such that any valid (void *) value can be converted to this type
              and back.  According to the C language standard, it shall be capable of storing values
              in the range [INTPTR_MIN, INTPTR_MAX].

              The length modifier for intptr_t for the printf(3) family of functions is expanded  by
              the  macros  PRIdPTR  and  PRIiPTR  (defined  in  <inttypes.h>); resulting commonly in
              %"PRIdPTR" or %"PRIiPTR" for  printing  intptr_t  values.   The  length  modifier  for
              intptr_t  for  the  scanf(3) family of functions is expanded by the macros SCNdPTR and
              SCNiPTR, (defined in <inttypes.h>); resulting commonly in %"SCNdPTR" or %"SCNiPTR" for
              scanning intptr_t values.

              Conforming to: C99 and later; POSIX.1-2001 and later.

              See also: the uintptr_t and void * types in this page.

       lconv
              Include: <locale.h>.

              struct lconv {                  /* Values in the "C" locale: */
                  char   *decimal_point;      /* "." */
                  char   *thousands_sep;      /* "" */
                  char   *grouping;           /* "" */
                  char   *mon_decimal_point;  /* "" */
                  char   *mon_thousands_sep;  /* "" */
                  char   *mon_grouping;       /* "" */
                  char   *positive_sign;      /* "" */
                  char   *negative_sign;      /* "" */
                  char   *currency_symbol;    /* "" */
                  char    frac_digits;        /* CHAR_MAX */
                  char    p_cs_precedes;      /* CHAR_MAX */
                  char    n_cs_precedes;      /* CHAR_MAX */
                  char    p_sep_by_space;     /* CHAR_MAX */
                  char    n_sep_by_space;     /* CHAR_MAX */
                  char    p_sign_posn;        /* CHAR_MAX */
                  char    n_sign_posn;        /* CHAR_MAX */
                  char   *int_curr_symbol;    /* "" */
                  char    int_frac_digits;    /* CHAR_MAX */
                  char    int_p_cs_precedes;  /* CHAR_MAX */
                  char    int_n_cs_precedes;  /* CHAR_MAX */
                  char    int_p_sep_by_space; /* CHAR_MAX */
                  char    int_n_sep_by_space; /* CHAR_MAX */
                  char    int_p_sign_posn;    /* CHAR_MAX */
                  char    int_n_sign_posn;    /* CHAR_MAX */
              };

              Contains  members related to the formatting of numeric values.  In the "C" locale, its
              members have the values shown in the comments above.

              Conforming to: C11 and later; POSIX.1-2001 and later.

              See also: setlocale(3), localeconv(3), charsets(5), locale(7)

       ldiv_t
              Include: <stdlib.h>.

              typedef struct {
                  long    quot; /* Quotient */
                  long    rem;  /* Remainder */
              } ldiv_t;

              It is the type of the value returned by the ldiv(3) function.

              Conforming to: C99 and later; POSIX.1-2001 and later.

              See also: ldiv(3)

       lldiv_t
              Include: <stdlib.h>.

              typedef struct {
                  long long   quot; /* Quotient */
                  long long   rem;  /* Remainder */
              } lldiv_t;

              It is the type of the value returned by the lldiv(3) function.

              Conforming to: C99 and later; POSIX.1-2001 and later.

              See also: lldiv(3)

       off_t
              Include: <sys/types.h>.  Alternatively, <aio.h>, <fcntl.h>,  <stdio.h>,  <sys/mman.h>,
              <sys/stat.h.h>, or <unistd.h>.

              Used for file sizes.  According to POSIX, this shall be a signed integer type.

              Versions: <aio.h> and <stdio.h> define off_t since POSIX.1-2008.

              Conforming to: POSIX.1-2001 and later.

              Notes:  On  some architectures, the width of this type can be controlled with the fea‐
              ture test macro _FILE_OFFSET_BITS.

              See also:  lseek(2),  mmap(2),  posix_fadvise(2),  pread(2),  truncate(2),  fseeko(3),
              lockf(3), posix_fallocate(3), feature_test_macros(7)

       pid_t
              Include:  <sys/types.h>.   Alternatively, <fcntl.h>, <sched.h>, <signal.h>, <spawn.h>,
              <sys/msg.h>,   <sys/sem.h>,   <sys/shm.h>,   <sys/wait.h>,   <termios.h>,    <time.h>,
              <unistd.h>, or <utmpx.h>.

              This  type  is  used for storing process IDs, process group IDs, and session IDs.  Ac‐
              cording to POSIX, it shall be a signed integer type, and the implementation shall sup‐
              port  one or more programming environments where the width of pid_t is no greater than
              the width of the type long.

              Conforming to: POSIX.1-2001 and later.

              See also: fork(2), getpid(2), getppid(2), getsid(2), gettid(2),  getpgid(2),  kill(2),
              pidfd_open(2), sched_setscheduler(2), waitpid(2), sigqueue(3), credentials(7),

       ptrdiff_t
              Include: <stddef.h>.

              Used  for a count of elements, and array indices.  It is the result of subtracting two
              pointers.  According to the C language standard, it shall be a signed integer type ca‐
              pable of storing values in the range [PTRDIFF_MIN, PTRDIFF_MAX].

              The length modifier for ptrdiff_t for the printf(3) and the scanf(3) families of func‐
              tions is t; resulting commonly in %td or %ti for printing ptrdiff_t values.

              Conforming to: C99 and later; POSIX.1-2001 and later.

              See also: the size_t and ssize_t types in this page.

       regex_t
              Include: <regex.h>.

              typedef struct {
                  size_t  re_nsub; /* Number of parenthesized subexpressions. */
              } regex_t;

              This is a structure type used in regular expression matching.   It  holds  a  compiled
              regular expression, compiled with regcomp(3).

              Conforming to: POSIX.1-2001 and later.

              See also: regex(3)

       regmatch_t
              Include: <regex.h>.

              typedef struct {
                  regoff_t    rm_so; /* Byte offset from start of string
                                        to start of substring */
                  regoff_t    rm_eo; /* Byte offset from start of string of
                                        the first character after the end of
                                        substring */
              } regmatch_t;

              This is a structure type used in regular expression matching.

              Conforming to: POSIX.1-2001 and later.

              See also: regexec(3)

       regoff_t
              Include: <regex.h>.

              According  to  POSIX, it shall be a signed integer type capable of storing the largest
              value that can be stored in either a ptrdiff_t type or a ssize_t type.

              Versions: Prior to POSIX.1-2008, the type was capable of  storing  the  largest  value
              that can be stored in either an off_t type or a ssize_t type.

              Conforming to: POSIX.1-2001 and later.

              See also: the regmatch_t structure and the ptrdiff_t and ssize_t types in this page.

       sigevent
              Include: <signal.h>.  Alternatively, <aio.h>, <mqueue.h>, or <time.h>.

              struct sigevent {
                  int             sigev_notify; /* Notification type */
                  int             sigev_signo;  /* Signal number */
                  union sigval    sigev_value;  /* Signal value */
                  void          (*sigev_notify_function)(union sigval);
                                                /* Notification function */
                  pthread_attr_t *sigev_notify_attributes;
                                                /* Notification attributes */
              };

              For further details about this type, see sigevent(7).

              Versions: <aio.h> and <time.h> define sigevent since POSIX.1-2008.

              Conforming to: POSIX.1-2001 and later.

              See also: timer_create(2), getaddrinfo_a(3), lio_listio(3), mq_notify(3)

              See also the aiocb structure in this page.

       siginfo_t
              Include: <signal.h>.  Alternatively, <sys/wait.h>.

              typedef struct {
                  int      si_signo;  /* Signal number */
                  int      si_code;   /* Signal code */
                  pid_t    si_pid;    /* Sending process ID */
                  uid_t    si_uid;    /* Real user ID of sending process */
                  void    *si_addr;   /* Address of faulting instruction */
                  int      si_status; /* Exit value or signal */
                  union sigval si_value;  /* Signal value */
              } siginfo_t;

              Information  associated with a signal.  For further details on this structure (includ‐
              ing additional, Linux-specific fields), see sigaction(2).

              Conforming to: POSIX.1-2001 and later.

              See  also:  pidfd_send_signal(2),  rt_sigqueueinfo(2),  sigaction(2),  sigwaitinfo(2),
              psiginfo(3)

       sigset_t
              Include: <signal.h>.  Alternatively, <spawn.h>, or <sys/select.h>.

              This is a type that represents a set of signals.  According to POSIX, this shall be an
              integer or structure type.

              Conforming to: POSIX.1-2001 and later.

              See also: epoll_pwait(2), ppoll(2), pselect(2),  sigaction(2),  signalfd(2),  sigpend
              ing(2), sigprocmask(2), sigsuspend(2), sigwaitinfo(2), signal(7)

       sigval
              Include: <signal.h>.

              union sigval {
                  int     sigval_int; /* Integer value */
                  void   *sigval_ptr; /* Pointer value */
              };

              Data passed with a signal.

              Conforming to: POSIX.1-2001 and later.

              See also: pthread_sigqueue(3), sigqueue(3), sigevent(7)

              See also the sigevent structure and the siginfo_t type in this page.

       size_t
              Include:  <stddef.h>  or  <sys/types.h>.   Alternatively,  <aio.h>, <glob.h>, <grp.h>,
              <iconv.h>, <monetary.h>, <mqueue.h>, <ndbm.h>, <pwd.h>, <regex.h>,  <search.h>,  <sig
              nal.h>,  <stdio.h>,  <stdlib.h>,  <string.h>,  <strings.h>, <sys/mman.h>, <sys/msg.h>,
              <sys/sem.h>,   <sys/shm.h>,   <sys/socket.h>,   <sys/uio.h>,   <time.h>,   <unistd.h>,
              <wchar.h>, or <wordexp.h>.

              Used for a count of bytes.  It is the result of the sizeof operator.  According to the
              C language standard, it shall be an unsigned integer type capable of storing values in
              the  range [0, SIZE_MAX].  According to POSIX, the implementation shall support one or
              more programming environments where the width of size_t is no greater than  the  width
              of the type long.

              The  length  modifier  for size_t for the printf(3) and the scanf(3) families of func‐
              tions is z; resulting commonly in %zu or %zx for printing size_t values.

              Versions: <aio.h>, <glob.h>, <grp.h>, <iconv.h>, <mqueue.h>, <pwd.h>, <signal.h>,  and
              <sys/socket.h> define size_t since POSIX.1-2008.

              Conforming to: C99 and later; POSIX.1-2001 and later.

              See  also:  read(2),  write(2),  fread(3), fwrite(3), memcmp(3), memcpy(3), memset(3),
              offsetof(3)

              See also the ptrdiff_t and ssize_t types in this page.

       ssize_t
              Include: <sys/types.h>.  Alternatively, <aio.h>, <monetary.h>, <mqueue.h>,  <stdio.h>,
              <sys/msg.h>, <sys/socket.h>, <sys/uio.h>, or <unistd.h>.

              Used  for  a count of bytes or an error indication.  According to POSIX, it shall be a
              signed integer type capable of storing values at least in the range  [-1,  SSIZE_MAX],
              and  the  implementation  shall support one or more programming environments where the
              width of ssize_t is no greater than the width of the type long.

              Glibc and most other implementations provide a length modifier  for  ssize_t  for  the
              printf(3)  and  the  scanf(3) families of functions, which is z; resulting commonly in
              %zd or %zi for printing ssize_t values.  Although z works for ssize_t on  most  imple‐
              mentations,  portable  POSIX programs should avoid using it—for example, by converting
              the value to intmax_t and using its length modifier (j).

              Conforming to: POSIX.1-2001 and later.

              See also: read(2), readlink(2), readv(2), recv(2), send(2), write(2)

              See also the ptrdiff_t and size_t types in this page.

       suseconds_t
              Include: <sys/types.h>.  Alternatively, <sys/select.h>, or <sys/time.h>.

              Used for time in microseconds.  According to POSIX, it shall be a signed integer  type
              capable  of storing values at least in the range [-1, 1000000], and the implementation
              shall support one or more programming environments where the width of  suseconds_t  is
              no greater than the width of the type long.

              Conforming to: POSIX.1-2001 and later.

              See also: the timeval structure in this page.

       time_t
              Include:  <time.h>  or <sys/types.h>.  Alternatively, <sched.h>, <sys/msg.h>, <sys/se
              lect.h>, <sys/sem.h>, <sys/shm.h>, <sys/stat.h>, <sys/time.h>, or <utime.h>.

              Used for time in seconds.  According to POSIX, it shall be an integer type.

              Versions: <sched.h> defines time_t since POSIX.1-2008.

              Conforming to: C99 and later; POSIX.1-2001 and later.

              See also: stime(2), time(2), ctime(3), difftime(3)

       timer_t
              Include: <sys/types.h>.  Alternatively, <time.h>.

              Used for timer ID returned by timer_create(2).  According to POSIX, there are  no  de‐
              fined comparison or assignment operators for this type.

              Conforming to: POSIX.1-2001 and later.

              See also: timer_create(2), timer_delete(2), timer_getoverrun(2), timer_settime(2)

       timespec
              Include:   <time.h>.    Alternatively,  <aio.h>,  <mqueue.h>,  <sched.h>,  <signal.h>,
              <sys/select.h>, or <sys/stat.h>.

              struct timespec {
                  time_t  tv_sec;  /* Seconds */
                  long    tv_nsec; /* Nanoseconds */
              };

              Describes times in seconds and nanoseconds.

              Conforming to: C11 and later; POSIX.1-2001 and later.

              See  also:  clock_gettime(2),  clock_nanosleep(2),  nanosleep(2),  timerfd_gettime(2),
              timer_gettime(2)

       timeval
              Include: <sys/time.h>.  Alternatively, <sys/resource.h>, <sys/select.h>, or <utmpx.h>.

              struct timeval {
                  time_t      tv_sec;  /* Seconds */
                  suseconds_t tv_usec; /* Microseconds */
              };

              Describes times in seconds and microseconds.

              Conforming to: POSIX.1-2001 and later.

              See also: gettimeofday(2), select(2), utimes(2), adjtime(3), futimes(3), timeradd(3)

       uid_t
              Include: <sys/types.h>.  Alternatively, <pwd.h>, <signal.h>, <stropts.h>, <sys/ipc.h>,
              <sys/stat.h>, or <unistd.h>.

              A type used to hold user IDs.  According to POSIX, this shall be an integer type.

              Conforming to: POSIX.1-2001 and later.

              See also: chown(2), getuid(2), geteuid(2), getresuid(2), getpwnam(2), credentials(7)

       uintmax_t
              Include: <stdint.h>.  Alternatively, <inttypes.h>.

              An unsigned integer type capable of representing any value  of  any  unsigned  integer
              type  supported by the implementation.  According to the C language standard, it shall
              be capable of storing values in the range [0, UINTMAX_MAX].

              The macro UINTMAX_C() expands its argument to an integer constant of type uintmax_t.

              The length modifier for uintmax_t for the printf(3) and the scanf(3) families of func‐
              tions is j; resulting commonly in %ju or %jx for printing uintmax_t values.

              Conforming to: C99 and later; POSIX.1-2001 and later.

              Bugs:  uintmax_t  is not large enough to represent values of type unsigned __int128 in
              implementations where unsigned __int128 is defined and unsigned long long is less than
              128 bits wide.

              See also: the intmax_t type in this page.

       uintN_t
              Include: <stdint.h>.  Alternatively, <inttypes.h>.

              uint8_t, uint16_t, uint32_t, uint64_t

              An  unsigned integer type of a fixed width of exactly N bits, N being the value speci‐
              fied in its type name.  According to the C language standard, they shall be capable of
              storing values in the range [0, UINTN_MAX], substituting N by the appropriate number.

              According to POSIX, uint8_t, uint16_t, and uint32_t are required; uint64_t is only re‐
              quired in implementations that provide integer types with  width  64;  and  all  other
              types of this form are optional.

              The  length  modifiers for the uintN_t types for the printf(3) family of functions are
              expanded by macros of the forms PRIuN, PRIoN,  PRIxN,  and  PRIXN  (defined  in  <int
              types.h>);  resulting for example in %"PRIu32" or %"PRIx32" for printing uint32_t val‐
              ues.  The length modifiers for the uintN_t types for the scanf(3) family of  functions
              are  expanded  by macros of the forms SCNuN, SCNoN, SCNxN, and SCNXN (defined in <int
              types.h>); resulting for example in %"SCNu16" or %"SCNx16" for scanning uint16_t  val‐
              ues.

              Conforming to: C99 and later; POSIX.1-2001 and later.

              See also: the intmax_t, intN_t, and uintmax_t types in this page.

       uintptr_t
              Include: <stdint.h>.  Alternatively, <inttypes.h>.

              An  unsigned  integer type such that any valid (void *) value can be converted to this
              type and back.  According to the C language standard, it shall be capable  of  storing
              values in the range [0, UINTPTR_MAX].

              The length modifier for uintptr_t for the printf(3) family of functions is expanded by
              the macros PRIuPTR, PRIoPTR, PRIxPTR, and PRIXPTR (defined in <inttypes.h>); resulting
              commonly  in %"PRIuPTR" or %"PRIxPTR" for printing uintptr_t values.  The length modi‐
              fier for uintptr_t for the scanf(3) family of functions is expanded by the macros  SC
              NuPTR,  SCNoPTR, SCNxPTR, and SCNXPTR (defined in <inttypes.h>); resulting commonly in
              %"SCNuPTR" or %"SCNxPTR" for scanning uintptr_t values.

              Conforming to: C99 and later; POSIX.1-2001 and later.

              See also: the intptr_t and void * types in this page.

       va_list
              Include: <stdarg>.  Alternatively, <stdio.h>, or <wchar.h>.

              Used by functions with a varying number of arguments of varying types.   The  function
              must  declare  an  object  of  type  va_list  which is used by the macros va_start(3),
              va_arg(3), va_copy(3), and va_end(3) to traverse the list of arguments.

              Conforming to: C99 and later; POSIX.1-2001 and later.

              See also: va_start(3), va_arg(3), va_copy(3), va_end(3)

       void *
              According to the C language standard, a pointer to any object type may be converted to
              a pointer to void and back.  POSIX further requires that any pointer, including point‐
              ers to functions, may be converted to a pointer to void and back.

              Conversions from and to any other pointer type  are  done  implicitly,  not  requiring
              casts at all.  Note that this feature prevents any kind of type checking: the program‐
              mer should be careful not to convert a void * value to a type incompatible to that  of
              the underlying data, because that would result in undefined behavior.

              This type is useful in function parameters and return value to allow passing values of
              any type.  The function will typically use some mechanism to know the real type of the
              data being passed via a pointer to void.

              A  value  of  this  type can't be dereferenced, as it would give a value of type void,
              which is not possible.  Likewise, pointer arithmetic is not possible with  this  type.
              However, in GNU C, pointer arithmetic is allowed as an extension to the standard; this
              is done by treating the size of a void or of a function as 1.  A consequence  of  this
              is that sizeof is also allowed on void and on function types, and returns 1.

              The  conversion  specifier  for  void * for the printf(3) and the scanf(3) families of
              functions is p.

              Versions: The POSIX requirement about compatibility between void * and function point‐
              ers was added in POSIX.1-2008 Technical Corrigendum 1 (2013).

              Conforming to: C99 and later; POSIX.1-2001 and later.

              See also: malloc(3), memcmp(3), memcpy(3), memset(3)

              See also the intptr_t and uintptr_t types in this page.

NOTES
       The  structures  described  in this manual page shall contain, at least, the members shown in
       their definition, in no particular order.

       Most of the integer types described in this page don't have a corresponding  length  modifier
       for  the  printf(3)  and  the scanf(3) families of functions.  To print a value of an integer
       type that doesn't have a length modifier, it should be converted to intmax_t or uintmax_t  by
       an explicit cast.  To scan into a variable of an integer type that doesn't have a length mod‐
       ifier, an intermediate temporary variable of type intmax_t or uintmax_t should be used.  When
       copying  from  the  temporary variable to the destination variable, the value could overflow.
       If the type has upper and lower limits, the user should check that the value is within  those
       limits,  before  actually  copying  the value.  The example below shows how these conversions
       should be done.

   Conventions used in this page
       In "Conforming to" we only concern ourselves with C99 and later and POSIX.1-2001  and  later.
       Some  types may be specified in earlier versions of one of these standards, but in the inter‐
       ests of simplicity we omit details from earlier standards.

       In "Include", we first note the "primary" header(s) that define the type according to  either
       the C or POSIX.1 standards.  Under "Alternatively", we note additional headers that the stan‐
       dards specify shall define the type.

EXAMPLES
       The program shown below scans from a string and prints a value stored in a variable of an in‐
       teger type that doesn't have a length modifier.  The appropriate conversions from and to int
       max_t, and the appropriate range checks, are used as explained in the notes section above.

       #include <stdint.h>
       #include <stdio.h>
       #include <stdlib.h>
       #include <sys/types.h>

       int
       main (void)
       {
           static const char *const str = "500000 us in half a second";
           suseconds_t us;
           intmax_t    tmp;

           /* Scan the number from the string into the temporary variable */

           sscanf(str, "%jd", &tmp);

           /* Check that the value is within the valid range of suseconds_t */

           if (tmp < -1 || tmp > 1000000) {
               fprintf(stderr, "Scanned value outside valid range!\n");
               exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
           }

           /* Copy the value to the suseconds_t variable 'us' */

           us = tmp;

           /* Even though suseconds_t can hold the value -1, this isn't
              a sensible number of microseconds */

           if (us < 0) {
               fprintf(stderr, "Scanned value shouldn't be negative!\n");
               exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
           }

           /* Print the value */

           printf("There are %jd microseconds in half a second.\n",
                   (intmax_t) us);

           exit(EXIT_SUCCESS);
       }

SEE ALSO
       feature_test_macros(7), standards(7)

COLOPHON
       This page is part of release 5.10 of the Linux  man-pages  project.   A  description  of  the
       project,  information about reporting bugs, and the latest version of this page, can be found
       at https://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/.



Linux                                        2020-12-21                         SYSTEM_DATA_TYPES(7)

Generated by phpMan Author: Che Dong Under GNU General Public License - MarkDown Format | JSON Format
2026-05-27 07:42 @216.73.216.66 CrawledBy Mozilla/5.0 AppleWebKit/537.36 (KHTML, like Gecko; compatible; ClaudeBot/1.0; +claudebot@anthropic.com)
Valid XHTML 1.0 TransitionalValid CSS!

^_back to top