Format Specifiers in C++

Note

This article applies to Visual Studio 2015. If you're looking for the latest Visual Studio documentation, see Visual Studio documentation. We recommend upgrading to the latest version of Visual Studio. Download it here

You can change the format in which a value is displayed in the Watch window using format specifiers.

You can also use format specifiers in the Immediate window, the Command window, and even in source windows. If you pause on an expression in those windows, the result will appear in a DataTip. The DataTip display reflects the format specifier.

Note

The Visual Studio native debugger changed to a new debugging engine. As part of this change, some new format specifiers were added and some old ones were removed. The older debugger is still used when you do interop (mixed native and managed) debugging with C++/CLI. The following sections in this topic show the format specifiers for each debug engine.

Using Format Specifiers

If you have the following code:

int main() {  
    int my_var1 = 0x0065;  
    int my_var2 = 0x0066;  
    int my_var3 = 0x0067;  
}  

Add the my_var1 variable to the Watch window (while debugging, Debug / Windows / Watch / Watch 1) and set the display to hexadecimal (in the Watch window, right-click the variable and select Hexadecimal Display). Now the Watch window shows that it contains the value 0x0065. To see this value expressed as a character instead of an integer, in the Name column, after the variable name, add the character format specifier , c. The Value column now appears with 101 'e'.

WatchFormatCPlus1

Format Specifiers

The following tables show the format specifiers that you can use in Visual Studio. Specifiers in bold are not supported for interop debugging with C++/CLI.

Specifier Format Original Watch Value Value Displayed
d decimal integer 0x00000066 102
o unsigned octal integer 0x00000066 000000000146
x

h
hexadecimal integer 102 0xcccccccc
X

H
hexadecimal integer 102 0xCCCCCCCC
c single character 0x0065, c 101 'e'
s const char* string <location> “hello world” "hello world"
sb const char* string <location> “hello world” hello world
s8 const char* string <location> “hello world” "hello world"
s8b const char* string <location> “hello world” "hello world"
su const wchar_t* const

char16_t* string
<location> L”hello world” L"hello world"

u"hello world"
sub const wchar_t* const

char16_t* string
<location> L”hello world” hello world
bstr BSTR string <location> L”hello world” L”hello world”
s32 UTF-32 string <location> U”hello world” U”hello world”
s32b UTF-32 string (no quotation marks) <location> U”hello world” hello world
en enum Saturday(6) Saturday
hv Pointer type - indicates that the pointer value being inspected is the result of the heap allocation of an array, for example, new int[3]. <location>{<first member>} <location>{<first member>, <second member>, …}
na Suppresses the memory address of a pointer to an object. <location>, {member=value…} {member=value…}
nd Displays only the base class information, ignoring derived classes (Shape*) square includes base class and derived class information Displays only base class information
hr HRESULT or Win32 error code. (The debugger now decodes HRESULTs automatically, so this specifier is not required in those cases. S_OK S_OK
wc Window class flag 0x0010 WC_DEFAULTCHAR
wm Windows message numbers 16 WM_CLOSE
! raw format, ignoring any data type views customizations <customized representation> 4

Note

When the hv format specifier is present, the debugger attempts to determine the length of the buffer and display the appropriate number of elements. Because it is not always possible for the debugger to find the exact buffer size of an array, you should use a size specifier (pBuffer,[bufferSize]) whenever possible. The hv format specifier is intended for scenarios where the buffer size is not readily available

Size specifiers for pointers as arrays

If you have a pointer to an object you want to view as an array, you can use an integer or an expression to specify the number of array elements:

Specifier Format Original Watch Valuen Value Displayed
n Decimal or hexadecimal integer pBuffer,[32]

pBuffer,[0x20]
Displays pBuffer as a 32 element array.
[exp] A valid C++ expression that evaluates to an integer. pBuffer,[bufferSize] Displays pBuffer as an array of bufferSize elements.
expand(n) A valid C++ expression that evaluates to an integer pBuffer, expand(2) Displays the third element of pBuffer

Format specifiers for interop debugging with C++/CLI

Specifiers in bold are supported only for debugging native and C++/CLI code.

Specifier Format Original Watch Value Value Displayed
d,i signed decimal integer 0xF000F065 -268373915
u unsigned decimal integer 0x0065 101
o unsigned octal integer 0xF065 0170145
x,X Hexadecimal integer 61541 0x0000f065
l,h long or short prefix for: d, i, u, o, x, X 00406042 0x0c22
f signed floating point (3./2.), f 1.500000
e signed scientific notation (3.0/2.0) 1.500000e+000
g signed floating point or signed scientific notation, whichever is shorter (3.0/2.0) 1.5
c single character <location> 101 'e'
s const char* <location> "hello world"
su const wchar_t*

const char16_t*
<location> L"hello world"
sub const wchar_t*

const char16_t*
<location> hello world
s8 const char* <location> "hello world"
hr HRESULT or Win32 error code. (The debugger now decodes HRESULTs automatically, so this specifier is not required in those cases. S_OK S_OK
wc Window class flag. 0x00000040, WC_DEFAULTCHAR
wm Windows message numbers 0x0010 WM_CLOSE
! raw format, ignoring any data type views customizations <customized representation> 4

Format specifiers memory locations in interop debugging with C++/CLI

The following table contains formatting symbols used for memory locations. You can use a memory location specifier with any value or expression that evaluates to a location.

Symbol Format Original Watch Value Value Displayed
ma 64 ASCII characters 0x0012ffac 0x0012ffac .4...0...".0W&.......1W&.0.:W..1...."..1.JO&.1.2.."..1...0y....1
m 16 bytes in hexadecimal, followed by 16 ASCII characters 0x0012ffac 0x0012ffac B3 34 CB 00 84 30 94 80 FF 22 8A 30 57 26 00 00 .4...0...".0W&..
mb 16 bytes in hexadecimal, followed by 16 ASCII characters 0x0012ffac 0x0012ffac B3 34 CB 00 84 30 94 80 FF 22 8A 30 57 26 00 00 .4...0...".0W&..
mw 8 words 0x0012ffac 0x0012ffac 34B3 00CB 3084 8094 22FF 308A 2657 0000
md 4 doublewords 0x0012ffac 0x0012ffac 00CB34B3 80943084 308A22FF 00002657
mq 2 quadwords 0x0012ffac 0x0012ffac 7ffdf00000000000 5f441a790012fdd4
mu 2-byte characters (Unicode) 0x0012ffac 0x0012ffac 8478 77f4 ffff ffff 0000 0000 0000 0000

Size specifier for pointers as arrays in interop debugging with C++/CLIt

If you have a pointer to an object you want to view as an array, you can use an integer to specify the number of array elements:

Specifier Format Expression Value Displayed
n Decimal integer pBuffer[32] Displays pBuffer as a 32 element array.