Escape sequences are used to represent certain special characters within string literals and character constants.
The following escape sequences are available. ISO C requires a diagnostic if the backslash is followed by any character not listed here:
| Escape sequence | Description | Representation |
|---|---|---|
| Simple escape sequences | ||
\' | single quote | byte 0x27 in ASCII encoding |
\" | double quote | byte 0x22 in ASCII encoding |
\? | question mark | byte 0x3f in ASCII encoding |
\\ | backslash | byte 0x5c in ASCII encoding |
\a | audible bell | byte 0x07 in ASCII encoding |
\b | backspace | byte 0x08 in ASCII encoding |
\f | form feed - new page | byte 0x0c in ASCII encoding |
\n | line feed - new line | byte 0x0a in ASCII encoding |
\r | carriage return | byte 0x0d in ASCII encoding |
\t | horizontal tab | byte 0x09 in ASCII encoding |
\v | vertical tab | byte 0x0b in ASCII encoding |
| Numeric escape sequences | ||
\nnn | arbitrary octal value | code unit nnn |
\xn... | arbitrary hexadecimal value | code unit n... (arbitrary number of hexadecimal digits) |
| Universal character names | ||
\unnnn (since C99) | Unicode value in allowed range; may result in several code units | code point U+nnnn |
\Unnnnnnnn (since C99) | Unicode value in allowed range; may result in several code units | code point U+nnnnnnnn |
Range of universal character namesIf a universal character name corresponds to a code point that is not | (since C99) |
\0 is the most commonly used octal escape sequence, because it represents the terminating null character in null-terminated strings.
The new-line character \n has special meaning when used in text mode I/O: it is converted to the OS-specific newline byte or byte sequence.
Octal escape sequences have a length limit of three octal digits but terminate at the first character that is not a valid octal digit if encountered sooner.
Hexadecimal escape sequences have no length limit and terminate at the first character that is not a valid hexadecimal digit. If the value represented by a single hexadecimal escape sequence does not fit the range of values represented by the character type used in this string literal or character constant (char, char8_t(since C23), char16_t, char32_t(since C11), or wchar_t), the result is unspecified.
| A universal character name in a narrow string literal or a 16-bit string literal(since C11) may map to more than one code unit, e.g. | (since C99) |
| A universal character name corresponding to a code pointer greater than |
(since C99) (until C23) |
| The question mark escape sequence | (until C23) |
#include <stdio.h>
int main(void)
{
printf("This\nis\na\ntest\n\nShe said, \"How are you?\"\n");
}Output:
This is a test She said, "How are you?"
| C++ documentation for Escape sequences |
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