Is there an effective way in C to check if a given string is convertable to an integer?
An output error should indicate if the string is convertable or not.
For example, "aa" is not convertable, "123" is convertable.
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1It is probably best to ask two separate questions for this - the best answers for each language are likely very different (although there will be a lot of overlap in people qualified to answer).– BoBTFishApr 23, 2014 at 7:41
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Does "123aa" is convertible to integer for you ?– Jarod42Apr 23, 2014 at 7:42
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"123aa" is not convertable to an integer.– The_MundaneApr 23, 2014 at 7:43
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Check if strspn(str, "0123456789) == strlen(str)– cupApr 23, 2014 at 7:43
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It's better to decide on either C xor C++. What if someone posts the perfect C answer, and another one posts the perfect C++ answer? Which one will you accept? -- edit: I will remove the C++ tag for you have C answers by now. -- edit: Because the chaos succeeded, I will add the C++ tag again.– Sebastian MachApr 23, 2014 at 7:44
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4 Answers
C++11 has the std::stoi
, std::stol
, and std::stoll
functions, which throw an exception if the string cannot be converted.
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1It's worth noting that these also throw an exception if you try to convert a string containing 1323723172981729817298798271972198728917918729817928 - since it's bigger than the biggest integer. (And that there are
unsigned
variants of all of the above). Apr 23, 2014 at 7:47 -
With C, use the strtol(3) function with an end pointer:
char* end=NULL;
long l = strtol(cstr, &end, 0);
if (end >= cstr && *end)
badnumber = true;
else
badnumber = false;
With C++11, use the std::strtol function (it raises an exception on failure).
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Why
if (end && ...)
? Do you meanif (end > cstr && ...)
? And you have also check for "overflow", compare this answer stackoverflow.com/a/1640804/1187415 to the duplicate question.– Martin RApr 23, 2014 at 7:47
You could also loop through the string and appply isdigit
function to each character
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1
bool is_convertible_to_int(const std::string &s) {
try {
int t = std::stoi(s);
return std::to_string(t).length() == s.length();
}
catch (std::invalid_argument) {
return false;
}
}