I'm working my way through K&R's 2nd edition, and I've been stumped with this seemingly simple example:

#include <stdio.h>

main(){
    double c;
    for(c = 0; ((getchar() != EOF) && (getchar() != '\n')); ++c)
        ;
    printf("%.0f\n",c);
}

It simply isn't working correctly. I added in the (getchar() != '\n') portion to end the program when I press enter, but that doesn't really help either.

Here's some sample output, using the gcc that comes with Mac OSX 10.6 dev tools.

pool-000:Desktop user$ ./a.out 
a
0
pool-000:Desktop user$ ./a.out 
asdf

2
pool-000:Desktop user$ ./a.out 
asfasf

3

So something is obviously wrong. I'm on page 18, if that helps. This isn't homework, this is for fun!

Thanks :)

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Looks like you have a few fundamental problems; what exactly are you trying to accomplish? – Carl Norum Nov 1 '09 at 21:43
2  
I guess you are not terminating the input with Ctrl+D. Revert to the original implementation (without != '\n') and press Ctrl+D at the end of your input. – Mehrdad Afshari Nov 1 '09 at 21:47
Thanks, Mehrdad, that was the issue. Much appreciated!If you submit it as an answer, I'd accept it. – Isaac Hodes Nov 1 '09 at 21:54
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2 Answers

up vote 5 down vote accepted

Each call to getchar() will wait for a character to be read, so you're reading more than you think per iteration of the loop.

Also, at least in my opinion, a counter is (almost) never a double, you should use an integer type such as plain old int.

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+1, perhaps bring the getchar() info to the top? That is the major problem with his code. The use of double is secondary. – sixlettervariables Nov 1 '09 at 21:48
It was the second getchar() that was causing the problems – thanks! K&R's code had the double in it, though. – Isaac Hodes Nov 1 '09 at 21:52
@sixlettervariables: Agree, and done. – unwind Nov 2 '09 at 7:39
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The problem with doing two "getchar()" operations is that you will read TWO get chars in the conditional test... before you get to the ++c.

Ditch the "EOF" comparison and it should work as you expect.

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Also a good point! Thanks – I've got a better idea of how getchar() works now, and a better idea of how C interprets ctrl-D/EOF. – Isaac Hodes Nov 1 '09 at 22:00
You're welcome! – Peter K. Nov 1 '09 at 22:02
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