.\" Copyright (c) 1990, 1991 The Regents of the University of California. .\" All rights reserved. .\" .\" This code is derived from software contributed to Berkeley by .\" the American National Standards Committee X3, on Information .\" Processing Systems. .\" .\" %sccs.include.redist.man% .\" .\" @(#)stdarg.3 6.8 (Berkeley) 06/29/91 .\" .Dd .Dt STDARG 3 .Os .Sh NAME .Nm stdarg .Nd variable argument lists .Sh SYNOPSIS .Fd #include .Ft void .Fn va_start "va_list ap" last .Ft type .Fn va_arg "va_list ap" type .Ft void .Fn va_end "va_list ap" .Sh DESCRIPTION A function may be called with a varying number of arguments of varying types. The include file .Aq Pa stdarg.h declares a type .Pq Em va_list and defines three macros for stepping through a list of arguments whose number and types are not known to the called function. .Pp The called function must declare an object of type .Em va_list which is used by the macros .Fn va_start , .Fn va_arg , and .Fn va_end . .Pp The .Fn va_start macro initializes .Fa ap for subsequent use by .Fn va_arg and .Fn va_end , and must be called first. .Pp The parameter .Fa last is the name of the last parameter before the variable argument list, i.e. the last parameter of which the calling function knows the type. .Pp Because the address of this parameter is used in the .Fn va_start macro, it should not be declared as a register variable, or as a function or an array type. .Pp The .Fn va_start macro returns no value. .Pp The .Fn va_arg macro expands to an expression that has the type and value of the next argument in the call. The parameter .Fa ap is the .Em va_list Fa ap initialized by .Fn va_start . Each call to .Fn va_arg modifies .Fa ap so that the next call returns the next argument. The parameter .Fa type is a type name specified so that the type of a pointer to an object that has the specified type can be obtained simply by adding a * to .Fa type . .Pp If there is no next argument, or if .Fa type is not compatible with the type of the actual next argument (as promoted according to the default argument promotions), random errors will occur. .Pp The first use of the .Fn va_arg macro after that of the .Fn va_start macro returns the argument after .Fa last . Successive invocations return the values of the remaining arguments. .Pp The .Fn va_end macro handles a normal return from the function whose variable argument list was initialized by .Fn va_start . .Pp The .Fn va_end macro returns no value. .Sh EXAMPLES The function .Em foo takes a string of format characters and prints out the argument associated with each format character based on the type. .Bd -literal -offset indent void foo(char *fmt, ...) { va_list ap; int d; char c, *p, *s; va_start(ap, fmt); while (*fmt) switch(*fmt++) { case 's': /* string */ s = va_arg(ap, char *); printf("string %s\en", s); break; case 'd': /* int */ d = va_arg(ap, int); printf("int %d\en", d); break; case 'c': /* char */ c = va_arg(ap, char); printf("char %c\en", c); break; } va_end(ap); } .Ed .Sh STANDARDS The .Fn va_start , .Fn va_arg , and .Fn va_end macros conform to .St -ansiC . .Sh COMPATIBILITY These macros are .Em not compatible with the historic macros they replace. A backward compatible version can be found in the include file .Aq Pa varargs.h . .Sh BUGS Unlike the .Em varargs macros, the .Nm stdarg macros do not permit programmers to code a function with no fixed arguments. This problem generates work mainly when converting .Em varargs code to .Nm stdarg code, but it also creates difficulties for variadic functions that wish to pass all of their arguments on to a function that takes a .Em va_list argument, such as .Xr vfprintf 3 .