Escape Sequence in C
An Escape Sequence in C language is a sequence of characters that doesn’t represent itself when used inside string literal or character.
It is composed of two or more characters starting with backslash \. For example: \n represents new line.
List of Escape Sequences in C
Escape Sequence Meaning
\a Alarm or Beep
\b Backspace
\f Form Feed
\n New Line
\r Carriage Return
\t Tab (Horizontal)
\v Vertical Tab
\\ Backslash
\’ Single Quote
\” Double Quote
\? Question Mark
\nnn octal number
\xhh hexadecimal number
\0 Null
Escape Sequence Example
#include<stdio.h>
int main(){
int number=50;
printf(“You\nare\nlearning\n\’c\’ language\n\”Do you know C language\””);
return 0;
}
Output:
You
are
learning
‘c’ language
“Do you know C language”
Related Post:
Features of C Programming Language
Dynamic memory allocation in C
Difference Between Type Casting and Type Conversion in C
Difference Between Variables and Constants
C Program to generate Fibonacci Triangle
C Program to print “hello” without semicolon
C Program to swap two numbers without third variable
Count the number of digits in C