Revision tags: php-8.0.0, php-7.3.25, php-7.4.13, php-8.0.0RC5, php-7.4.13RC1, php-8.0.0RC4, php-7.3.25RC1, php-7.4.12, php-8.0.0RC3, php-7.3.24, php-8.0.0RC2, php-7.4.12RC1, php-7.3.24RC1, php-7.2.34, php-8.0.0rc1, php-7.4.11, php-7.3.23, php-8.0.0beta4, php-7.4.11RC1, php-7.3.23RC1, php-8.0.0beta3, php-7.4.10, php-7.3.22, php-8.0.0beta2, php-7.3.22RC1, php-7.4.10RC1, php-8.0.0beta1, php-7.4.9, php-7.2.33, php-7.3.21, php-8.0.0alpha3, php-7.4.9RC1, php-7.3.21RC1, php-7.4.8, php-7.2.32, php-8.0.0alpha2, php-7.3.20, php-8.0.0alpha1, php-7.4.8RC1, php-7.3.20RC1, php-7.4.7, php-7.3.19, php-7.4.7RC1, php-7.3.19RC1, php-7.4.6, php-7.2.31, php-7.4.6RC1, php-7.3.18RC1 |
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0221b8b2 |
| 21-Apr-2020 |
Nikita Popov |
Add support for * width and precision in printf() If * is used for width/precision in printf, then the width/precision is provided by a printf argument instead of being part of the forma
Add support for * width and precision in printf() If * is used for width/precision in printf, then the width/precision is provided by a printf argument instead of being part of the format string. Semantics generally match those of printf in C. This can be used to easily reproduce PHP's float printing behavior: // Locale-sensitive using precision ini setting. // Used prior to PHP 8.0. sprintf("%.*G", (int) ini_get('precision'), $float); // Locale-insensitive using precision ini setting. // Used since to PHP 8.0. sprintf("%.*H", (int) ini_get('precision'), $float); // Locale-insensitive using serialize_precision ini setting. // Used in serialize(), json_encode() etc. sprintf("%.*H", (int) ini_get('serialize_precision'), $float); Closes GH-5432.
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