From a0cc022cc79984648e0ea5e7e5e7620686c56b60 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Rich Felker Date: Wed, 7 Aug 2013 11:14:45 -0400 Subject: fix ecvt/fcvt decimal point position output these functions are obsolete and have no modern standard. the text in SUSv2 is highly ambiguous, specifying that "negative means to the left of the returned digits", which suggested to me that 0 would mean to the right of the first digit. however, this does not agree with historic practice, and the Linux man pages are more clear, specifying that a negative value means "that the decimal point is to the left of the start of the string" (in which case, 0 would mean the start of the string, in accordance with historic practice). --- src/stdlib/ecvt.c | 2 +- 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-) (limited to 'src/stdlib') diff --git a/src/stdlib/ecvt.c b/src/stdlib/ecvt.c index 48e70cd8..79c3de63 100644 --- a/src/stdlib/ecvt.c +++ b/src/stdlib/ecvt.c @@ -13,7 +13,7 @@ char *ecvt(double x, int n, int *dp, int *sign) for (j=0; tmp[i]!='e'; j+=(tmp[i++]!='.')) buf[j] = tmp[i]; buf[j] = 0; - *dp = atoi(tmp+i+1); + *dp = atoi(tmp+i+1)+1; return buf; } -- cgit v1.2.1