- The format specifier `q` (`%q`) has a different behavior, where it shall print a given string as a quoted string, which is safe to use in shell inputs.
- Common escape sequences are interpreted, namely the following:
| escape | description |
| :-: | :--- |
| `\\\\`| literal backslash |
| `\\"` | literal double quote |
| `\\a` | alert (BEL) |
| `\\b` | backspace |
| `\\c` | Ends the format string |
| `\\e` | escape (`\\x1b`) |
| `\\f` | form feed |
| `\\n` | newline |
| `\\r` | carriage return |
| `\\t` | tab |
| `\\v` | vertical tab |
The _format_ string is reapplied until all arguments are consumed, and a missing argument is treated as zero for numeric format specifiers, and an empty string for string format specifiers.
## Examples
```sh
# print 64 as a hexadecimal number, with the starting '0x'
$ printf '%#x' 64
# prints "a0\n", ignoring everything after '\c'
$ printf '%s%d\n\caaaa' a
# prints "123400", as 'x' is an invalid number, and the missing argument for the last '%d' is treated as zero.