1

I want to be able to have a user input a-z or c-z or c-p or whatever and have it return the actual letters between those two. I figured I would have to use ASCII numbering so I could use these steps:

  1. Look for '-', if true

  2. Look at first char that was input(char a in a-z), find ASCII #

  3. Look at last char that was input (char z in a-z), find ASCII #

  4. Print first letter based on ASCII #, then with a loop print the rest, up until the last letter in a-z (in that case being z).

Here's my code so far, but I think it's way off. I don't have a good grasp on the ASCII stuff in C, if that's what I even need.

#include <stdio.h>
#include <string.h>

void expand (char s1[], char s2[]){
    int j = 0;
    for (j; j <= s1[j-1]; ++j){
        if(s1[j+2] = '-'){
            while(j <= 70){
                ++j;
                printf("%c\n", s1[j]);
            }
        }else{
             printf("Invalid\n");
        }
    }
}

int main(){

    int g = 40;
    char s1[g], s2[g];

    printf("Please enter a-z or an equivalent:\n");

    scanf("%s", s1);
    expand(s1, s2);
    return 0;
}
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  • Please indent your code, it will make it more readable. If you haven't learned what that means, it just means to add a tab in each new block (a new block is code inside a {}, whether it is inside a function, inside a while, inside an if, etc.)
    – Edan Maor
    Oct 1, 2009 at 23:44
  • Interesting and fun question.
    – GManNickG
    Oct 1, 2009 at 23:45

4 Answers 4

2
char i;
char *str = "c-k";
for (i = str[0]; i <= str[2]; i++) {
    printf("%c", i);
}

The code doesn't do much error checking/corner conditions, but you get the idea.

If you need a resulting string instead of printing it on the screen, you can do this (assuming that you have validated str to be of the desired format):

char i;
// this will allocate memory so that the result can be stored
char *rv = (char *)malloc(((str[2] - str[0]) + 1) * sizeof(char));
for (i = str[0]; i <= str[2]; i++) {
    rv[i - str[0]] = i; // i - str[0] will result in 0, 1, 2 everytime you iterate
}
rv[i - str[0]] = '\0';

I will also recommend reading through the first few chapters of a good C-book, like K and R, so that you get a good grasp on such things.

1

To begin with, you can find a table of ASCII character codes here. With these codes in hand, the operation should become relatively simple. It will go along these lines (in pseudocode form):

take_input_from_user();
parse_the_input();

for (int = first_characters_number, i =< last_characters_number; ++i)
{

    our_character = i;
    print_out(our_character);
}

For more specifics to C, IIRC you cannot pass an array like this: function_name(int[] a). IIRC, it has to go like function_name(int* a ) You can then deference the pointer and do fun stuff.

1
  • True, you don't need it in this problem, but I provided the reference in case he wants to do something like dealing with capital letters and the like.
    – ZachS
    Oct 2, 2009 at 0:27
1

The idea you posted in your question is correct, but I'm not sure how the actual code you wrote is trying to express that idea. I'd break the program down into exactly the pieces you wrote above. I've added your steps as comments in the code.

char sz[4]; // I'm assuming we're only going to get 3 characters
printf("Please enter a-z or an equivalent:\n");
scanf("%s", s1);

// You wrote: 
// 1) Look for '-', if true
// 2) Look at first char that was input(char a in a-z), find ASCII #
// 3) Look at last char that was input (char z in a-z), find ASCII #
// 
// sz[0] is the first char that was input, sz[1] the dash, sz[2] the last char
// the number of letters you need to print is sz[2] - sz[0] (+1 if you want the.
// actual letter that appears in after the dash, which you do).

int numOfLettersToPrint = sz[2] - sz[0] + 1;

// Your next step is:
// 
// 4) Print first letter based on ASCII #, then with a loop print the rest, up until the last letter in a-z (in that case being z).
for (int i = 0; i < numOfLettersToPrint; i++) {
    // Here, we want to actually print the letter.
    // sz[0] is the first letter, for example a. We add "i" to it so it goes up by one every time.
    printf("%c", sz[0] + i);
}
1
  • 1
    To ensure only three characters on input, use "%.3s"! Oct 2, 2009 at 2:03
-1

This is pretty much the standard approach to this problem.

#define z 2*(c<d)-1
int d;int main(int c,char**v){c=v[1][0],d=v[1][2],d+=z;for(;c-d;c+=z)putchar(c);}
$ ./az a-e
abcde
$ ./az z-q
zyxwvutsrq

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