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1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 | printf format [ arg ... ]
Print the arguments according to the format specification. For-
matting rules are the same as used in C. The same escape
sequences as for echo are recognised in the format. All C con-
version specifications ending in one of csdiouxXeEfgGn are han-
dled. In addition to this, `%b' can be used instead of `%s' to
cause escape sequences in the argument to be recognised and `%q'
can be used to quote the argument in such a way that allows it
to be reused as shell input. With the numeric format specifiers,
if the corresponding argument starts with a quote character, the
numeric value of the following character is used as the number
to print; otherwise the argument is evaluated as an arithmetic
expression. See the section `Arithmetic Evaluation' in zsh-
misc(1) for a description of arithmetic expressions. With `%n',
the corresponding argument is taken as an identifier which is
created as an integer parameter.
Normally, conversion specifications are applied to each argument
in order but they can explicitly specify the nth argument is to
be used by replacing `%' by `%n$' and `*' by `*n$'. It is rec-
ommended that you do not mix references of this explicit style
with the normal style and the handling of such mixed styles may
be subject to future change.
If arguments remain unused after formatting, the format string
is reused until all arguments have been consumed. With the print
builtin, this can be suppressed by using the -r option. If more
arguments are required by the format than have been specified,
the behaviour is as if zero or an empty string had been speci-
fied as the argument.
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