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Home/ Questions/Q 8484295
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 10, 20262026-06-10T20:20:33+00:00 2026-06-10T20:20:33+00:00

What I’m trying to do is make a new char* using a syntax similar

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What I’m trying to do is make a new char* using a syntax similar to printf:

char* myNewString = XXXXprintf("My string says %s", myFirstString);

Is this doable without printing to an output stream?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-10T20:20:34+00:00Added an answer on June 10, 2026 at 8:20 pm

    You’re looking for the sprintf or snprintf function.

    Note that sprintf doesn’t return a pointer to a newly allocated string; you have to allocate the string yourself, and make sure it’s big enough:

    char target[100];
    sprintf(target, "My string says %s", myFirstString);
    

    Unless you can be certain that the target is big enough, you should use snprintf, which limits the number of bytes copied to the target string.

    snprintf returns the number of characters that would have been written to the target string. You can call snprintf with a null target and zero size to find out how many big a buffer is needed, then allocate the buffer and call it again to write to the target (NOTE: My original code sample had an off-by-one error.)

    #include <stdio.h>
    #include <stdlib.h>
    
    int main(void) {
        const char *myFirstString = "hello, world";
        char *target;
        size_t size = snprintf(NULL, 0, "My string says %s", myFirstString);
        target = malloc(size+1); /* +1 for terminating '\0' */
        if (target == NULL) {
            fprintf(stderr, "Allocation failed\n");
            exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
        }
        size = snprintf(target, size+1, "My string says %s", myFirstString);
        printf("target = \"%s\"\n", target);
        return 0;
    }
    

    Note that snprintf was added to C by the 1999 ISO standard. Microsoft’s compiler doesn’t appear to support it; it does provide a function it calls _snprintf which probably does the same thing.

    There’s also a GNU extension called asprintf which does allocate the string for you:

    char *target;
    asprintf(&target, "My string says %s", myFirstString);
    

    If you use this, you’ll have to use free() later to deallocate the string. And since this is a GNU extension, it will make your code less portable.

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