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`fd_printf`: print formatted text directly to a file descriptor
===============================================================
:copyright 2013 Luke Shumaker
:license WTFPL-2

I wrote this while debugging some code, and thought it might be useful
to others:

	#define _GNU_SOURCE     /* vasprintf() */
	#include <stdarg.h>     /* va_start()/va_end() */
	#include <stdio.h>      /* vasprintf() */
	#include <stdlib.h>     /* free() */
	#include <unistd.h>     /* write() */
	
	int
	fd_printf(int fd, const char *format, ...)
	{
		va_list arg;
		int len;
		char *str;
	
		va_start(arg, format);
		len = vasprintf(&str, format, arg);
		va_end(arg);
	
		write(fd, str, len);
	
		free(str);
		return len;
	}


It is a version of `printf` that prints to a file descriptor—where
`fprintf` prints to a `FILE*` data structure.

The appeal of this is that `FILE*` I/O is buffered—which means mixing
it with raw file descriptor I/O is going to produce weird results.