This article is Copyright © 2000 by Jürgen Hermann and Copyright © 2000 by C-Scene. All Rights Reserved.

The scanf family of functions, while quite powerful, is most often used only by beginners (because they do not know other ways of input) or for simple conversions from string to other types (where the strtoX() family of functions is much more appropriate).

Problems of scanf and fscanf, regarding keeping track of position...

Due to the problems associated with scanf and fscanf, we only use sscanf in the following examples. You should do the same in your code.

One of the most common problem beginners have with scanf is the need to provide pointers to the variables that ultimately shall hold the parsed values. Since scanf is a function that takes a variable number of arguments, they are not type-checked as usual. Because of this, you can provide non-pointer arguments, pointers to the wrong type, or pointers to strings instead of just strings, and the compiler will not fetch these errors at compile time. If you are lucky, you get a segment violation at run-time; if not, you'll get other behaviour. !!! \% vs. %% !!!

Some compilers (notably, gcc) support type-checking for literal format strings by parsing the format string during compile-time and then applying the appropriate type checks.

The following code shows those common errors and the correct code on consecutive lines:

Another common error is not to check the return type of scanf, which you always should do. scanf returns the number of sucessfully scanned fields, so a proper scanf calls looks like this:

Brian W. Kernighan, Dennis M. Ritchie, The C Programming Language.
Prentice Hall, 1988, 2nd edition, ISBN 0-13-110362-8.