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weather.outdooe_temp is a float value which is being updated every time I press a button. set_temp is a float to ascii function. If I use that the thing works, but not if I use the code below.

char Thermo_Buff66[4];
static void SetBox(ScreenObj_t const *pS, EVENT_MSG const *pMsg)
{
    //set_temp(weather.outdoor_temp,&a);//it works if i use this function.
    sprintf(Thermo_Buff66,"%2.1f",weather.outdoor_temp);
    (void)sprintf(Thermo_Buff,"%s\xc2\xb0""",Thermo_Buff66);
    (void)DataBoxHandler(pS, &msg, "Set Temp", (uint8_t *)Thermo_Buff);

    //currently displaying any # value....!!ing!!
 }
8
  • Your code doesn't make any sense. Why is there both Thermo_Buff and Thermo_Buff66? How are we supposed to know how set_temp() works, it doesn't even get a string buffer sent to it?
    – unwind
    Mar 14, 2013 at 11:07
  • Ok let me simplify it: If I send the float value to a ftoa function it works but if I use sprintf(Thermo_Buff66,"%2.1f",weather.outdoor_temp); It displays # values. Mar 14, 2013 at 11:08
  • I just tried if it would probably work this way. Just a trial an error but didn't really work. set_temp is a float to ascii converter fucntion. @unwind Mar 14, 2013 at 11:11
  • Your Thermo_Buff66 array isn't very big, and the format you have used doesn't make a lot of sense - you want it to be 2 characters wide, including the '.' - likely your actual number will end up wider than that...
    – JasonD
    Mar 14, 2013 at 11:16
  • Initially i did that to just cancel out the unessential part. But ya i put Thermo_Buff66[50]. Still the same problem @JasonD Mar 14, 2013 at 11:25

1 Answer 1

1
char Thermo_Buff66[4];
sprintf(Thermo_Buff66,"%2.1f",weather.outdoor_temp);

The buffer you have allocated (Thermo_Buff66) is too short for a floating number representing outdoor temperature (often 2 digits) plus a . plus a digit after. Indeed, it doesn't have space for the terminating '\0' character. So immediate correction would be to set the size to 5. Still, in case of armageddon (or simply being in a non-SI country ... cough ... US), the temperature could even get to above 100, in which case again you overflow your buffer. Do yourself a favor and use snprintf.

Regardless, you sprintf into a buffer, then using %s you sprintf it into something else, which there is no point to. You can do it all directly in one, removing Thermo_Buff66 altogether:

(void)sprintf(Thermo_Buff, "%.1f\xc2\xb0", weather.outdoor_temp);
(void)DataBoxHandler(pS, &msg, "Set Temp", (uint8_t *)Thermo_Buff);

Side note: the . and the precision digit already take up 2 characters. Setting minimum width to 2 is therefore reduntant. Perhaps you thought the 2 in %2.1 is the number of digits before the .? Well it's not. It's the minimum overall width.

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