Why does the xorg server consumes so much memory?

Pat Kane pekane52 at gmail.com
Sun Apr 29 16:25:02 PDT 2007


That is probably why they invented the "%#" construct, from TFM:

       #      The  value  should be converted to an ''alternate form''.  For
o
              conversions, the first character of the output  string  is
made
              zero (by prefixing a 0 if it was not zero already).  For x and
X
              conversions, a non-zero result has the string '0x' (or '0X'
for
              X  conversions) prepended to it.  For a, A, e, E, f, F, g, and
G
              conversions, the result will always  contain  a  decimal
point,
              even  if  no digits follow it (normally, a decimal point
appears
              in the results of those conversions only if  a  digit
follows).
              For g and G conversions, trailing zeros are not removed from
the
              result as they would otherwise be.  For other  conversions,
the
              result is undefined.

aye should be 0x..


Argv,
Pat
---
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://lists.x.org/archives/xorg/attachments/20070429/bcf343e2/attachment.html>


More information about the xorg mailing list