I am having issues with repeating key checking using a function that utilizes getch().
Here is a code example:
static char g_keybuffer[256];
_Bool IsKeyDown(char c)
{
char ch;
if(kbhit())
ch = getch();
if(ch == -32 || ch == 224)
{
ch = getch();
}
g_keybuffer[ch] = 1;
if(g_keybuffer[c] == 1)
{
g_keybuffer[c] = 0;
return 1;
}
return 0;
}
/*
*
*/
int main(int argc, char** argv) {
while(1)
{
if(IsKeyDown('a'))
{
printf("Test\n");
}
if(IsKeyDown('a'))
{
printf("Hello\n");
}
else if(IsKeyDown('b'))
{
printf("World\n");
}
Sleep(100);
}
return (EXIT_SUCCESS);
}
I know why the problem occurs. When a key is pressed, kbhit is true once per loop, and sets ch to the character retrieved from the buffer. When IsKeyDown is used, if it is equal to the parameter, the key in the buffer g_keybuffer is set equal to zero to avoid having a key be "down" infinitely. The problem with this is if you want to check if the same key is down more than once, only the first instance of IsKeyDown will be ran, with the rest being invalid due to the g_keybuffer of the key now being 0.
Does anyone know how I can change IsKeyDown to give it the ability to check the same key multiple times per looping? I'm stuck.
cin.ignore()
?ch
is uninitialized whenkbhit
return false. that will mess up your functionC++