strncmpci()
, a direct, drop-in case-insensitive string comparison replacement for strncmp()
and strcmp()
I'm not really a fan of the most-upvoted answer here (in part because it seems like it isn't correct since it should continue
if it reads a null terminator in either string--but not both strings at once--and it doesn't do this), so I wrote my own.
This is a direct drop-in replacement for strncmp()
, and has been tested with numerous test cases, as shown below.
It is identical to strncmp()
except:
- It is case-insensitive.
- The behavior is NOT undefined (it is well-defined) if either string is a null ptr. Regular
strncmp()
has undefined behavior if either string is a null ptr (see: https://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/string/byte/strncmp).
- It returns
INT_MIN
as a special sentinel error value if either input string is a NULL
ptr.
LIMITATIONS: Note that this code works on the original 7-bit ASCII character set only (decimal values 0 to 127, inclusive), NOT on unicode characters, such as unicode character encodings UTF-8 (the most popular), UTF-16, and UTF-32.
Here is the code only (no comments):
int strncmpci(const char * str1, const char * str2, size_t num)
{
int ret_code = 0;
size_t chars_compared = 0;
if (!str1 || !str2)
{
ret_code = INT_MIN;
return ret_code;
}
while ((chars_compared < num) && (*str1 || *str2))
{
ret_code = tolower((int)(*str1)) - tolower((int)(*str2));
if (ret_code != 0)
{
break;
}
chars_compared++;
str1++;
str2++;
}
return ret_code;
}
Fully-commented version:
/// \brief Perform a case-insensitive string compare (`strncmp()` case-insensitive) to see
/// if two C-strings are equal.
/// \note 1. Identical to `strncmp()` except:
/// 1. It is case-insensitive.
/// 2. The behavior is NOT undefined (it is well-defined) if either string is a null
/// ptr. Regular `strncmp()` has undefined behavior if either string is a null ptr
/// (see: https://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/string/byte/strncmp).
/// 3. It returns `INT_MIN` as a special sentinel value for certain errors.
/// - Posted as an answer here: https://stackoverflow.com/a/55293507/4561887.
/// - Aided/inspired, in part, by `strcicmp()` here:
/// https://stackoverflow.com/a/5820991/4561887.
/// \param[in] str1 C string 1 to be compared.
/// \param[in] str2 C string 2 to be compared.
/// \param[in] num max number of chars to compare
/// \return A comparison code (identical to `strncmp()`, except with the addition
/// of `INT_MIN` as a special sentinel value):
///
/// INT_MIN (usually -2147483648 for int32_t integers) Invalid arguments (one or both
/// of the input strings is a NULL pointer).
/// <0 The first character that does not match has a lower value in str1 than
/// in str2.
/// 0 The contents of both strings are equal.
/// >0 The first character that does not match has a greater value in str1 than
/// in str2.
int strncmpci(const char * str1, const char * str2, size_t num)
{
int ret_code = 0;
size_t chars_compared = 0;
// Check for NULL pointers
if (!str1 || !str2)
{
ret_code = INT_MIN;
return ret_code;
}
// Continue doing case-insensitive comparisons, one-character-at-a-time, of `str1` to `str2`, so
// long as 1st: we have not yet compared the requested number of chars, and 2nd: the next char
// of at least *one* of the strings is not zero (the null terminator for a C-string), meaning
// that string still has more characters in it.
// Note: you MUST check `(chars_compared < num)` FIRST or else dereferencing (reading) `str1` or
// `str2` via `*str1` and `*str2`, respectively, is undefined behavior if you are reading one or
// both of these C-strings outside of their array bounds.
while ((chars_compared < num) && (*str1 || *str2))
{
ret_code = tolower((int)(*str1)) - tolower((int)(*str2));
if (ret_code != 0)
{
// The 2 chars just compared don't match
break;
}
chars_compared++;
str1++;
str2++;
}
return ret_code;
}
Test code:
Download the entire sample code, with unit tests, from my eRCaGuy_hello_world repository here: "strncmpci.c":
(this is just a snippet)
int main()
{
printf("-----------------------\n"
"String Comparison Tests\n"
"-----------------------\n\n");
int num_failures_expected = 0;
printf("INTENTIONAL UNIT TEST FAILURE to show what a unit test failure looks like!\n");
EXPECT_EQUALS(strncmpci("hey", "HEY", 3), 'h' - 'H');
num_failures_expected++;
printf("------ beginning ------\n\n");
const char * str1;
const char * str2;
size_t n;
// NULL ptr checks
EXPECT_EQUALS(strncmpci(NULL, "", 0), INT_MIN);
EXPECT_EQUALS(strncmpci("", NULL, 0), INT_MIN);
EXPECT_EQUALS(strncmpci(NULL, NULL, 0), INT_MIN);
EXPECT_EQUALS(strncmpci(NULL, "", 10), INT_MIN);
EXPECT_EQUALS(strncmpci("", NULL, 10), INT_MIN);
EXPECT_EQUALS(strncmpci(NULL, NULL, 10), INT_MIN);
EXPECT_EQUALS(strncmpci("", "", 0), 0);
EXPECT_EQUALS(strncmp("", "", 0), 0);
str1 = "";
str2 = "";
n = 0;
EXPECT_EQUALS(strncmpci(str1, str2, n), 0);
EXPECT_EQUALS(strncmp(str1, str2, n), 0);
str1 = "hey";
str2 = "HEY";
n = 0;
EXPECT_EQUALS(strncmpci(str1, str2, n), 0);
EXPECT_EQUALS(strncmp(str1, str2, n), 0);
str1 = "hey";
str2 = "HEY";
n = 3;
EXPECT_EQUALS(strncmpci(str1, str2, n), 0);
EXPECT_EQUALS(strncmp(str1, str2, n), 'h' - 'H');
str1 = "heY";
str2 = "HeY";
n = 3;
EXPECT_EQUALS(strncmpci(str1, str2, n), 0);
EXPECT_EQUALS(strncmp(str1, str2, n), 'h' - 'H');
str1 = "hey";
str2 = "HEdY";
n = 3;
EXPECT_EQUALS(strncmpci(str1, str2, n), 'y' - 'd');
EXPECT_EQUALS(strncmp(str1, str2, n), 'h' - 'H');
str1 = "heY";
str2 = "hEYd";
n = 3;
EXPECT_EQUALS(strncmpci(str1, str2, n), 0);
EXPECT_EQUALS(strncmp(str1, str2, n), 'e' - 'E');
str1 = "heY";
str2 = "heyd";
n = 6;
EXPECT_EQUALS(strncmpci(str1, str2, n), -'d');
EXPECT_EQUALS(strncmp(str1, str2, n), 'Y' - 'y');
str1 = "hey";
str2 = "hey";
n = 6;
EXPECT_EQUALS(strncmpci(str1, str2, n), 0);
EXPECT_EQUALS(strncmp(str1, str2, n), 0);
str1 = "hey";
str2 = "heyd";
n = 6;
EXPECT_EQUALS(strncmpci(str1, str2, n), -'d');
EXPECT_EQUALS(strncmp(str1, str2, n), -'d');
str1 = "hey";
str2 = "heyd";
n = 3;
EXPECT_EQUALS(strncmpci(str1, str2, n), 0);
EXPECT_EQUALS(strncmp(str1, str2, n), 0);
str1 = "hEY";
str2 = "heyYOU";
n = 3;
EXPECT_EQUALS(strncmpci(str1, str2, n), 0);
EXPECT_EQUALS(strncmp(str1, str2, n), 'E' - 'e');
str1 = "hEY";
str2 = "heyYOU";
n = 10;
EXPECT_EQUALS(strncmpci(str1, str2, n), -'y');
EXPECT_EQUALS(strncmp(str1, str2, n), 'E' - 'e');
str1 = "hEYHowAre";
str2 = "heyYOU";
n = 10;
EXPECT_EQUALS(strncmpci(str1, str2, n), 'h' - 'y');
EXPECT_EQUALS(strncmp(str1, str2, n), 'E' - 'e');
EXPECT_EQUALS(strncmpci("nice to meet you.,;", "NICE TO MEET YOU.,;", 100), 0);
EXPECT_EQUALS(strncmp( "nice to meet you.,;", "NICE TO MEET YOU.,;", 100), 'n' - 'N');
EXPECT_EQUALS(strncmp( "nice to meet you.,;", "nice to meet you.,;", 100), 0);
EXPECT_EQUALS(strncmpci("nice to meet you.,;", "NICE TO UEET YOU.,;", 100), 'm' - 'u');
EXPECT_EQUALS(strncmp( "nice to meet you.,;", "nice to uEET YOU.,;", 100), 'm' - 'u');
EXPECT_EQUALS(strncmp( "nice to meet you.,;", "nice to UEET YOU.,;", 100), 'm' - 'U');
EXPECT_EQUALS(strncmpci("nice to meet you.,;", "NICE TO MEET YOU.,;", 5), 0);
EXPECT_EQUALS(strncmp( "nice to meet you.,;", "NICE TO MEET YOU.,;", 5), 'n' - 'N');
EXPECT_EQUALS(strncmpci("nice to meet you.,;", "NICE eo UEET YOU.,;", 5), 0);
EXPECT_EQUALS(strncmp( "nice to meet you.,;", "nice eo uEET YOU.,;", 5), 0);
EXPECT_EQUALS(strncmpci("nice to meet you.,;", "NICE eo UEET YOU.,;", 100), 't' - 'e');
EXPECT_EQUALS(strncmp( "nice to meet you.,;", "nice eo uEET YOU.,;", 100), 't' - 'e');
EXPECT_EQUALS(strncmpci("nice to meet you.,;", "nice-eo UEET YOU.,;", 5), ' ' - '-');
EXPECT_EQUALS(strncmp( "nice to meet you.,;", "nice-eo UEET YOU.,;", 5), ' ' - '-');
if (globals.error_count == num_failures_expected)
{
printf(ANSI_COLOR_GRN "All unit tests passed!" ANSI_COLOR_OFF "\n");
}
else
{
printf(ANSI_COLOR_RED "FAILED UNIT TESTS! NUMBER OF UNEXPECTED FAILURES = %i"
ANSI_COLOR_OFF "\n", globals.error_count - num_failures_expected);
}
assert(globals.error_count == num_failures_expected);
return globals.error_count;
}
Sample output:
$ gcc -Wall -Wextra -Werror -ggdb -std=c11 -o ./bin/tmp strncmpci.c && ./bin/tmp
-----------------------
String Comparison Tests
-----------------------
INTENTIONAL UNIT TEST FAILURE to show what a unit test failure looks like!
FAILED at line 250 in function main! strncmpci("hey", "HEY", 3) != 'h' - 'H'
a: strncmpci("hey", "HEY", 3) is 0
b: 'h' - 'H' is 32
------ beginning ------
All unit tests passed!
References:
- This question & other answers here served as inspiration and gave some insight (Case Insensitive String Comparison in C)
- http://www.cplusplus.com/reference/cstring/strncmp/
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ASCII
- https://en.cppreference.com/w/c/language/operator_precedence
- Undefined Behavior research I did to fix part of my code above (see comments below):
- Google search for "c undefined behavior reading outside array bounds"
- Is accessing a global array outside its bound undefined behavior?
- https://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/language/ub - see also the many really great "External links" at the bottom!
- 1/3: http://blog.llvm.org/2011/05/what-every-c-programmer-should-know.html
- 2/3: https://blog.llvm.org/2011/05/what-every-c-programmer-should-know_14.html
- 3/3: https://blog.llvm.org/2011/05/what-every-c-programmer-should-know_21.html
- https://blog.regehr.org/archives/213
- https://www.geeksforgeeks.org/accessing-array-bounds-ccpp/
Topics to further research
- (Note: this is C++, not C) Lowercase of Unicode character
- tolower_tests.c on OnlineGDB: https://onlinegdb.com/HyZieXcew
TODO:
- Make a version of this code which also works on Unicode's UTF-8 implementation (character encoding)!