2010/1/4 Joseph Quinsey:
> 1) In my bad test, I already had my LOCALE set to C.ASCII:
>
> env | grep LC
> LC_ALL=C.ASCII
To use the locale set in the environment you need to invoke
setlocale(LC_CTYPE, ""), i.e. with an empty string as the second
parameter. Without a setlocale call, your progra
2010/1/4 Thomas Wolff:
> My assumption has been that *printf should be byte-transparent unless where
> it uses explicit wide character arguments.
What's that assumption based on?
> After all, legacy applications that do not care about locales at all may
> legitimately assume this since a C char
Hello,
Thank you Andy for your help. As per your suggestion, the problem was
resolved by adding the line:
setlocale (LC_CTYPE, "C.ASCII");
My actual code was something like:
#define CSI_ "\233"
...
sprintf (..., CSI_"%d;%dH", row, col);
So my problem is fixed.
But as a matter
Andy Koppe wrote:
2010/1/4 Joseph Quinsey
In Cygwin 1,7.1, sprintf() with the format string having an 8th bit set
appears to be broken. Sample code (where I've indicated the backslashes in
the comments, in case they are stripped out by the mailer):
#include
int main (void)
{
unsigned ch
2010/1/4 Joseph Quinsey
> In Cygwin 1,7.1, sprintf() with the format string having an 8th bit set
> appears to be broken. Sample code (where I've indicated the backslashes in
> the comments, in case they are stripped out by the mailer):
>
> #include
>
> int main (void)
> {
> unsigned char foo[3
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