One problem you have is that you modify eday
in the comparator function, but if the comparison fails, you have no way to set the search to start at the beginning of the string, because you don't know where the string started any more. This afflicts 'Thursday', which reports the 'next day' is Sunday. For some other tests, this worked OK. The next day after Saturday was reported as Sunday because of the kludge.
You also have a problem that the day after Saturday is undefined.
Here is sensibly working code. I use strcmp()
(and hence <string.h>
too) to do the comparison. I converted the while (cursor != NULL)
loop into a do { ... } while (cursor != head);
loop so that the circular linked list works correctly. I also print the input as it is read, and again in the formal output. This allows me to test using bash
's Here String notation (<<< string
) which is convenient. Note that the input checks for EOF and also limits the input string to 79 characters, preventing buffer overruns (aka stack overflows). The 'cursor' parameter to the function was unnecessary; it was set to null in the calling code, but the called function immediately set it to head
. So that parameter is no more, but the variable is still needed, so it is purely local to the function.
Code
#include <stdio.h>
#include <string.h>
struct weekday
{
char *ptrday;
struct weekday *next;
};
static void matchtest(char *eday, struct weekday *head)
{
struct weekday *cursor = head;
do
{
if (strcmp(eday, cursor->ptrday) == 0)
{
printf("The next day of the week after %s is %s\n", eday, cursor->next->ptrday);
return;
}
cursor = cursor->next;
} while (cursor != head);
printf("The 'day of the week' %s does not match any day of the week!\n", eday);
}
int main(void)
{
char enteredday[80];
struct weekday sunday, monday, tuesday, wednesday, thursday, friday, saturday;
struct weekday *head = &sunday;
sunday.ptrday = "Sunday";
monday.ptrday = "Monday";
tuesday.ptrday = "Tuesday";
wednesday.ptrday = "Wednesday";
thursday.ptrday = "Thursday";
friday.ptrday = "Friday";
saturday.ptrday = "Saturday";
sunday.next = &monday;
monday.next = &tuesday;
tuesday.next = &wednesday;
wednesday.next = &thursday;
thursday.next = &friday;
friday.next = &saturday;
saturday.next = &sunday;
printf("This is a test for the next day of the week.\n\n");
printf("Enter a day ");
if (scanf("%79s", enteredday) == 1)
{
printf("Got: [%s]\n", enteredday);
matchtest(enteredday, head);
}
return 0;
}
Example runs
$ for d in Sunday Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday Otherday; do ./nwd <<< $d; done
This is a test for the next day of the week.
Enter a day Got: [Sunday]
The next day of the week after Sunday is Monday
This is a test for the next day of the week.
Enter a day Got: [Monday]
The next day of the week after Monday is Tuesday
This is a test for the next day of the week.
Enter a day Got: [Tuesday]
The next day of the week after Tuesday is Wednesday
This is a test for the next day of the week.
Enter a day Got: [Wednesday]
The next day of the week after Wednesday is Thursday
This is a test for the next day of the week.
Enter a day Got: [Thursday]
The next day of the week after Thursday is Friday
This is a test for the next day of the week.
Enter a day Got: [Friday]
The next day of the week after Friday is Saturday
This is a test for the next day of the week.
Enter a day Got: [Saturday]
The next day of the week after Saturday is Sunday
This is a test for the next day of the week.
Enter a day Got: [Otherday]
The 'day of the week' Otherday does not match any day of the week!
$
As you can tell, I don't like having to type inputs more than once.
Code using a typedef
Also using a linked list in an array (though you could perfectly well just use an array of day names too).
#include <stdio.h>
#include <string.h>
typedef struct Weekday Weekday;
struct Weekday
{
char *ptrday;
Weekday *next;
};
Weekday days_of_the_week[7] =
{
{ "Sunday", &days_of_the_week[1] },
{ "Monday", &days_of_the_week[2] },
{ "Tuesday", &days_of_the_week[3] },
{ "Wednesday", &days_of_the_week[4] },
{ "Thursday", &days_of_the_week[5] },
{ "Friday", &days_of_the_week[6] },
{ "Saturday", &days_of_the_week[0] },
};
static void matchtest(char *eday, Weekday *head)
{
Weekday *cursor = head;
do
{
if (strcmp(eday, cursor->ptrday) == 0)
{
printf("The next day of the week after %s is %s\n", eday, cursor->next->ptrday);
return;
}
cursor = cursor->next;
} while (cursor != head);
printf("The 'day of the week' %s does not match any day of the week!\n", eday);
}
int main(void)
{
char enteredday[80];
printf("This is a test for the next day of the week.\n\n");
printf("Enter a day ");
if (scanf("%79s", enteredday) == 1)
{
printf("Got: [%s]\n", enteredday);
matchtest(enteredday, days_of_the_week);
}
return 0;
}