NAME
xo_message
,
xo_message_c
, xo_message_hc
,
xo_message_hcv
—
emit messages in multiple output
styles
LIBRARY
library “libxo”
SYNOPSIS
#include
<libxo/xo.h>
void
xo_message
(const
char *fmt,
...);
void
xo_message_e
(const
char *fmt,
...);
void
xo_message_c
(int
code, const char
*fmt, ...);
void
xo_message_hc
(xo_handle_t
*xop, int code, const
char *fmt,
...);
void
xo_message_hcv
(xo_handle_t
*xop, int code,
const char *fmt,
va_list vap);
DESCRIPTION
xo_message
generates text message which lack any sort of
structure. These functions should not be used under normal conditions, since
they completely defeat the value of using libxo. They are provided for
scenarios when the output's content is genuinely unknown and unusable. It is
used in converting programs where err/warn where not used, and error messages
went to stdout
, not stderr
.
Use of xo_message
allows backwards compatibility with
that output, but does not put the error in a useful form.
The xo_message
function generates output
strings using the printf-style format string and arguments provided. If the
format string does not end in a newline,
xo_message_e
will appear a colon, a space, and the
error associated with the current errno
value.
xo_message_c behaves similarly for the value passed in
the
code parameter.
xo_message_hc
accepts a handle
as opened by
xo_create(3) and xo_message_hcv accepts a
va_list parameter of arguments.
SEE ALSO
HISTORY
The libxo
library first appeared in
FreeBSD 11.0.
AUTHORS
libxo
was written by Phil
Shafer
<phil@freebsd.org>.