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std::perror

From cppreference.com
< cpp‎ | io‎ | c
 
 
 
 
Defined in header <cstdio>
void perror(constchar*s );

Prints a textual description of the error code currently stored in the system variable errno to stderr.

The description is formed by concatenating the following components:

  • the contents of the null-terminated byte string pointed to by s, followed by ": " (unless s is a null pointer or the character pointed to by s is the null character).
  • implementation-defined error message string describing the error code stored in errno, followed by '\n'. The error message string is identical to the result of std::strerror(errno).

Contents

[edit]Parameters

s - pointer to a null-terminated string with explanatory message

[edit]Return value

(none)

[edit]Example

#include <cerrno>#include <cmath>#include <cstdio>   int main(){double not_a_number =std::log(-1.0);if(errno==EDOM) std::perror("log(-1) failed");std::printf("%f\n", not_a_number);}

Possible output:

log(-1) failed: Numerical argument out of domain nan

[edit]See also

macro which expands to POSIX-compatible thread-local error number variable
(macro variable)[edit]
returns a text version of a given error code
(function)[edit]
C documentation for perror
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