Escape sequences
Escape sequences are used to represent certain special characters within string literals and character constants.
The following escape sequences are available. ISO C requires a diagnostic if the backslash is followed by any character not listed here:
| Escape sequence | Description | Representation | 
|---|---|---|
| \' | single quote | byte 0x27(in ASCII encoding) | 
| \" | double quote | byte 0x22(in ASCII encoding) | 
| \? | question mark | byte 0x3f(in ASCII encoding) | 
| \\ | backslash | byte 0x5c(in ASCII encoding) | 
| \a | audible bell | byte 0x07(in ASCII encoding) | 
| \b | backspace | byte 0x08(in ASCII encoding) | 
| \f | form feed - new page | byte 0x0c(in ASCII encoding) | 
| \n | line feed - new line | byte 0x0a(in ASCII encoding) | 
| \r | carriage return | byte 0x0d(in ASCII encoding) | 
| \t | horizontal tab | byte 0x09(in ASCII encoding) | 
| \v | vertical tab | byte 0x0b(in ASCII encoding) | 
| \nnn | arbitrary octal value | byte nnn | 
| \xnn | arbitrary hexadecimal value | byte nn | 
| \unnnn | Unicode character that is not in the basic character set. May result in several characters. | code point U+nnnn | 
| \Unnnnnnnn | Unicode character that is not in the basic character set. May result in several characters. | code point U+nnnnnnnn | 
Notes
Of the octal escape sequences, \0 is the most useful because it represents the terminating null character in null-terminated strings.
The new-line character \n has special meaning when used in text mode I/O: it is converted to the OS-specific newline byte or byte sequence.
Octal escape sequences have a length limit of three octal digits but terminate at the first character that is not a valid octal digit if encountered sooner.
Hexadecimal escape sequences have no length limit and terminate at the first character that is not a valid hexadecimal digit. If the value represented by a single hexadecimal escape sequence does not fit the range of values represented by the character type used in this string literal or character constant (char, char16_t, char32_t, or wchar_t), the result is unspecified.
A universal character name in a narrow string literal or a 16-bit string literal may map to more than one character, e.g. \U0001f34c is 4 char code units in UTF-8 (\xF0\x9F\x8D\x8C) and 2 char16_t code units in UTF-16 (\uD83C\uDF4C)).
The question mark escape sequence \? is used to prevent trigraphs from being interpreted inside string literals: a string such as "??/" is compiled as "\", but if the second question mark is escaped, as in "?\?/", it becomes "??/"
Example
#include <stdio.h> int main(void) { printf("This\nis\na\ntest\n\nShe said, \"How are you?\"\n"); }
Output:
This is a test She said, "How are you?"
References
- C11 standard (ISO/IEC 9899:2011):
- 5.2.2 Character display semantics (p: 24-25)
 
- 6.4.4.4 Character constants (p: 67-70)
 
- C99 standard (ISO/IEC 9899:1999):
- 5.2.2 Character display semantics (p: 19-20)
 
- 6.4.4.4 Character constants (p: 59-61)
 
- C89/C90 standard (ISO/IEC 9899:1990):
- 2.2.2 Character display semantics
 
- 3.1.3.4 Character constants
 
See also
| C++ documentation for Escape sequence |