How to pass variable number of arguments to printf/sprintf

have a look at vsnprintf as this will do what ya want http://www.cplusplus.com/reference/clibrary/cstdio/vsprintf/

you will have to init the va_list arg array first, then call it.

Example from that link: /* vsprintf example */

#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdarg.h>

void Error (char * format, ...)
{
  char buffer[256];
  va_list args;
  va_start (args, format);
  vsnprintf (buffer, 255, format, args);


  //do something with the error

  va_end (args);
}

I should have read more on existing questions in stack overflow.

C++ Passing Variable Number of Arguments is a similar question. Mike F has the following explanation:

There's no way of calling (eg) printf without knowing how many arguments you're passing to it, unless you want to get into naughty and non-portable tricks.

The generally used solution is to always provide an alternate form of vararg functions, so printf has vprintf which takes a va_list in place of the .... The ... versions are just wrappers around the va_list versions.

This is exactly what I was looking for. I performed a test implementation like this:

void Error(const char* format, ...)
{
    char dest[1024 * 16];
    va_list argptr;
    va_start(argptr, format);
    vsprintf(dest, format, argptr);
    va_end(argptr);
    printf(dest);
}

You are looking for variadic functions. printf() and sprintf() are variadic functions - they can accept a variable number of arguments.

This entails basically these steps:

  1. The first parameter must give some indication of the number of parameters that follow. So in printf(), the "format" parameter gives this indication - if you have 5 format specifiers, then it will look for 5 more arguments (for a total of 6 arguments.) The first argument could be an integer (eg "myfunction(3, a, b, c)" where "3" signifies "3 arguments)

  2. Then loop through and retrieve each successive argument, using the va_start() etc. functions.

There are plenty of tutorials on how to do this - good luck!


void Error(const char* format, ...)
{
    va_list argptr;
    va_start(argptr, format);
    vfprintf(stderr, format, argptr);
    va_end(argptr);
}

If you want to manipulate the string before you display it and really do need it stored in a buffer first, use vsnprintf instead of vsprintf. vsnprintf will prevent an accidental buffer overflow error.