strtol, wcstol, _strtol_l, _wcstol_l

Convert strings to a long-integer value.

long strtol(
   const char *nptr,
   char **endptr,
   int base 
);
long wcstol(
   const wchar_t *nptr,
   wchar_t **endptr,
   int base 
);
long _strtol_l(
   const char *nptr,
   char **endptr,
   int base,
   _locale_t locale
);
long _wcstol_l(
   const wchar_t *nptr,
   wchar_t **endptr,
   int base,
   _locale_t locale
);

Parameters

  • nptr
    Null-terminated string to convert.

  • endptr
    Pointer to character that stops scan.

  • base
    Number base to use.

  • locale
    Locale to use.

Return Value

strtol returns the value represented in the string nptr, except when the representation would cause an overflow, in which case it returns LONG_MAX or LONG_MIN. strtol returns 0 if no conversion can be performed. wcstol returns values analogously to strtol. For both functions, errno is set to ERANGE if overflow or underflow occurs.

See _doserrno, errno, _sys_errlist, and _sys_nerr for more information on these and other return codes.

Remarks

The strtol function converts nptr to a long. strtol stops reading the string nptr at the first character it cannot recognize as part of a number. This may be the terminating null character, or it may be the first numeric character greater than or equal to base.

wcstol is a wide-character version of strtol; its nptr argument is a wide-character string. These functions behave identically otherwise.

Generic-Text Routine Mappings

TCHAR.H routine

_UNICODE & _MBCS not defined

_MBCS defined

_UNICODE defined

_tcstol

strtol

strtol

wcstol

_tcstol_l

_strtol_l

_strtol_l

_wcstol_l

The current locale's LC_NUMERIC category setting determines recognition of the radix character in nptr*;* for more information, see setlocale. The functions without the _l suffix use the current locale; _strtol_l and _wcstol_l are identical to the corresponding functions without the _l suffix except that they use the locale passed in instead. For more information, see Locale.

If endptr is not NULL, a pointer to the character that stopped the scan is stored at the location pointed to by endptr. If no conversion can be performed (no valid digits were found or an invalid base was specified), the value of nptr is stored at the location pointed to by endptr.

strtol expects nptr to point to a string of the following form:

[whitespace] [{+ | –}] [0 [{ x | X }]] [digits]

A whitespace may consist of space and tab characters, which are ignored; digits are one or more decimal digits. The first character that does not fit this form stops the scan. If base is between 2 and 36, then it is used as the base of the number. If base is 0, the initial characters of the string pointed to by nptr are used to determine the base. If the first character is 0 and the second character is not 'x' or 'X', the string is interpreted as an octal integer; otherwise, it is interpreted as a decimal number. If the first character is '0' and the second character is 'x' or 'X', the string is interpreted as a hexadecimal integer. If the first character is '1' through '9', the string is interpreted as a decimal integer. The letters 'a' through 'z' (or 'A' through 'Z') are assigned the values 10 through 35; only letters whose assigned values are less than base are permitted.

Requirements

Routine

Required header

strtol

<stdlib.h>

wcstol

<stdlib.h> or <wchar.h>

_strtol_l

<stdlib.h>

For additional compatibility information, see Compatibility in the Introduction.

Example

See the example for strtod.

.NET Framework Equivalent

System::Convert::ToInt64

See Also

Concepts

Data Conversion

Locale

localeconv

setlocale, _wsetlocale

String to Numeric Value Functions

strtod, _strtod_l, wcstod, _wcstod_l

strtoul, _strtoul_l, wcstoul, _wcstoul_l

atof, _atof_l, _wtof, _wtof_l