9

I have

  char t[200];
  cin.get(s, 200);
  int i = 5; 
  int j = 10;

Is there any simple way to get substriing(i,j) from t beside copying every element seperately to the another array? No strings etc. just char t[200].

2
  • 6
    This is too vague. For what use ? You can simply pass the indices (start, end) to the function needing a substring, along with t...
    – Synxis
    Mar 23, 2013 at 12:10
  • 2
    The problem is that a standard C "string" is null-terminated. This means that, if you for instance take a substring from 5 to 10, you not only must have the address of the 5th character (easy to accomplish) but you also must place a null after the 10th. This will "stomp" on the original array. So, to do a "proper" job the string must be copied. (But if the rest of the array is a "throw-away" then you can work from the original buffer.) (There is also the scope issue to consider, of course -- a char array (not a pointer) "exists" only within the method declaring it.)
    – Hot Licks
    Mar 23, 2013 at 12:28

6 Answers 6

7

If you are allowed to modify t, you could set t[j] to 0 and then use t + i to get the substring.

If not, you are going to have to make a copy.

That said, why can't you just use std::string and save yourself the headache?

6
char* substr(char* arr, int begin, int len)
{
    char* res = new char[len + 1];
    for (int i = 0; i < len; i++)
        res[i] = *(arr + begin + i);
    res[len] = 0;
    return res;
}
2
  • 1
    Can you provide more detail about your answer in addition to the code already there? Apr 4, 2014 at 16:32
  • Thanks! I didn't know that i have to put 0 in the end and I always got strange results when printed copied arrays! Nov 3, 2019 at 16:55
4

If you need only to read the data then t+i is what you want, alas you'll have to manage the length of your substring...

char *sub = t+i;
int len = j-i;
printf("%.*s\n",len,sub);

If you need to have a distinct copy of the substring, then you must copy.

2

This should work fine:

#include <string.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <iostream>

using namespace std;

int main()
{
 char t[200];
 cin.get(t, 200);
 int i = 5; 
 int j = 10;
 char *to = (char*) malloc(j-i+1);
 strncpy(to, t+i, j-i);
 to[j-i]='\0';
 cout << to;
}

You can use new instead of malloc like this:

char* to = new char[j-i+1];
1
  • 1
    Why malloc when you have new ?
    – masoud
    Mar 23, 2013 at 13:14
1

This does not do any bounds checking to ensure the destination array is large enough

char newt[200];   
// copy j-i chars from position t+i to newt array
strncpy(newt, t + i, j-i);
// now null terminate
newt[j-i] = 0;
1

Use two pointers to denote a range within the string.

char const * beg = t+i;
char const * end = t+j+1;    
std::cout.write(beg, end-beg);

Or you can use a class that encapsulates this idea. There is something like that being proposed for the standard library. In the meantime, you can write your own, or you can use one from a library. For example, llvm::StringRef.

llvm::StringRef sref(t+i, j+1-i);
std:cout << sref;

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