0

I can't figure out how to pass radjectives (2D array of strings) to randomizeadj function.

#include<stdio.h>
#include<stdlib.h>
#include<time.h>
#include<ctype.h>

char randomizenouns(char[][]);
char randomizeadj(char[][]);

int main() // beginning of program.
{
  int a=0, b=0;
  char *answers[5]={'\0'};
  char *rnouns[3][10]={'\0'};
  char *radjectives[2][17]={'\0'};
  char *rcolors[11]={'\0'};

  radjectives[0][0]="intriguing";
  // ...
  radjectives[1][6]="loud";

  rnouns[0][0]="puppies";
  // ...
  rnouns[1][9]="people";

  rcolors[0]="black";
  // ...
  rcolors[10]="orange";

  { srand(time(NULL));

  printf("\n\tProgram Paragrahs\n");
  printf("\tFor this program you will answer several questions which will then be used to     conjure a random story the length of a paragraph.Please Keep your answers clean.Enjoy\n");

  printf("\nWhat is your name?");
  scanf("%s\n",answers[0]);
  printf("\nWhat is your favorite book?");
  scanf("%s",answers[1]);
  printf("\nWhat is your favorite color?");
  scanf("%s",answers[2]);
  printf("\nWhat city do you live in?");
  scanf("%s",answers[3]);
  printf("\nWhat car do you drive?");
  scanf("%s",answers[4]);

Right here is where I get lost - I cannot figure out how to pass the radjectives array to the randomizeadj function.

  printf("%s gets lost in their %s %s.\n",answers[0],randomizeadj(radjectives[a][b]),answers[1]);
  printf("%s loves to play with %s %s.\n",answers[0],rcolors[(rand()    %11)],randomizenouns(rnouns[a][b]);.
  printf("%s lives in a(n) %s %s.\n",answers[0],randomizeadj(radjectives[a][b]),answers[3]);
  printf("While living in %s %s drives a(n) %s %s.\n",answers[3],answers[0],rcolors[(rand() %11)],answers[4]);
  printf("%s is a(n) %s person who likes the color  %s.\n",answers[0],randomizeadj(radjectives[a][b]),answers[2]);
} // end of program

char randomizenouns(char nouns[x][y]);
{
     int x=(rand() %3);
     int y=(rand() %10);

     char randomnoun= nouns[x][y];

     return randomnoun;
}

char randomizeadj(char adjectives[x][y]);
{
     int x=(rand() %2);
     int y=(rand() %7);

     char randomadjective= adjectives[x][y];

     return randomadjective;
}

2 Answers 2

0

Simply

randomizeadj(radjectives);

e.g.

char *adj = randomizeadj(radjectives);
printf(adj);

At the moment things won't compile, change both the declarations and definitions of the functions to:

char *randomizenouns(char *nouns[3][10]);
char *randomizeadj(char *adjectives[2][17]);

or:

char *randomizenouns(char *nouns[][10]);
char *randomizeadj(char *adjectives[][17]);

Things I changed:

  • Changed char[][] (a 2D array of characters) to a 2D array or character pointers (also note that the first dimension of an array must always have a length specified).

  • Changed your functions to return char * rather than char (otherwise your function just returns a single character, rather than a string (but you still just return adjectives[x][y]).

Other things I changed:

Changed answers to not be an array of char pointers but rather a 2D array of chars, otherwise the compiler won't have memory assigned for the values you're trying to read in.

char answers[5][100];

There's also a ; where there shouldn't be here: (for both functions)

char randomizeadj(char adjectives[x][y]);
{
  ...

Test program.

2
  • It still says incompatible pointer type I cant figure out what I'm doing wrong. Feb 14, 2013 at 21:33
  • It says incompatible pointer type when I compile at the line where I am trying to use the function radomizeadj(radjectives) in the main body. Feb 14, 2013 at 21:42
0

you can simply pass it the way you have declared:

change your function definition and declaration to following:

 char *randomizenouns(char *nouns[rows][cols]) 
 char *randomizeadj(char *adjectives[rows][cols])

Note: for 2D array you need to pass cols size, so pass as required

EDIT

and in your code you have put semi-colon( ; ) in function defintion
char randomizeadj(char adjectives[x][y]); { ... }
char randomizenouns(char nouns[x][y]); { .... }
remove semi-colon from function definition


you were getting that incompatible pointer type error as earlier on you might not have changed the function declaration signatures with the matching function definition signatures.

0

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.