Is this short way for printing the string in hex is correct? If not, how it should be fixed?
uint8_t *m = string;
int c = sizeof(string);
while(c--){
printf("%02x ", *(m++));
}
No "oneliner", no. Besides, your code looks broken.
You can't use sizeof
like that, you probably mean strlen()
.
And you need to cast the character to an unsigned type to be safe.
So, something like this, perhaps:
void print_hex(const char *s)
{
while(*s)
printf("%02x", (unsigned int) *s++);
printf("\n");
}
Note that I don't call strlen()
, since there's no point in iterating over the string twice when once will do. :)
sizeof
may be fine if he's dealing with a plain array, e.g. uint8_t string[] = { 0x01, 0x02, 0x03 };
. However, his could would have an off-by-one (the while
loops reads one character too much.
Oct 4, 2012 at 10:24
while(--c)
in my case? but then the \00 isnt printed...
while(c--
) would be fine. However, if the array is always null-terminated you may just as well not use the c
variable at all but rather just use while(*m)
.
Oct 4, 2012 at 10:40
I think technically "string" is misleading here; you seem to be printing an array (not necessarily null-terminated) of uint8_t
values.
You will need a loop in any case. If you can use C99, you could write
for (size_t i = 0; i < sizeof(string); ++i) printf("%02x", string[i]);
If the array is null-terminated, and you don't need the original value of string
(this is often a case when passing the pointer by value), you could have
static void printArray(const uint8_t *string)
{
while (*string) printf("%02x", *string++);
}