vote up 1 vote down star

I need to get the ASCII character for every character in a string. Actually its every character in a (small) file. The following first 3 lines successfully pull all a file's contents into a string (per this recipe):

set fp [open "store_order_create_ddl.sql" r]
set data [read $fp]
close $fp

I believe I am correctly discerning the ASCII code for the characters (see http://wiki.tcl.tk/1497). However I'm having a problem figuring out how to loop over every character in the string.

First of all I don't think the following is an especially idiomatic way of looping over characters in a string with Tcl. Second and more importantly, it behaves incorrectly, inserting an extra element between every character.

Below is the code I've written to act on the contents of the "data" variable set above, followed by some sample output.

CODE:

for {set i 0} {$i < [string length $data]} {incr i} {
  set char [string index $data $i]
  scan $char %c ascii
  puts "char: $char (ascii: $ascii)"
}

OUTPUT:

char: C (ascii: 67)
char:  (ascii: 0)
char: R (ascii: 82)
char:  (ascii: 0)
char: E (ascii: 69)
char:  (ascii: 0)
char: A (ascii: 65)
char:  (ascii: 0)
char: T (ascii: 84)
char:  (ascii: 0)
char: E (ascii: 69)
char:  (ascii: 0)
char:   (ascii: 32)
char:  (ascii: 0)
char: T (ascii: 84)
char:  (ascii: 0)
char: A (ascii: 65)
char:  (ascii: 0)
char: B (ascii: 66)
char:  (ascii: 0)
char: L (ascii: 76)
char:  (ascii: 0)
char: E (ascii: 69)
flag

Don't know anything about TCL, but what I can tell you from the output is that your input string is in UTF-16, specifically UTF-16 little-endian, not ASCII. – Arthur Reutenauer Nov 4 at 18:27
Arthur, I appreciate the comment, but I'm very interested to know, how can you tell that (it's UTF-16 little-endian) from the output? – George Jempty Nov 4 at 18:35
1  
UTF-16 uses two-byte units to encode characters. For the first 65536 Unicode characters (the so-called Plane 0), it uses one of those units, for all the rest, it uses two (i.e., 4 bytes, but distinguished into two surrogate characters encoded each on two bytes). The ASCII characters form the first 128 Unicode characters, hence they're encoded using two bytes, the most significant one always being 0, the least significant one equal to the character's ASCII code. Here you see that each ASCII code is followed by a null byte, hence you're having least-order byte first, i.e. UTF-16LE. – Arthur Reutenauer Nov 4 at 19:10
Thanks Arthur, that's clearer than the Wikipedia article I looked up in the meantime! – George Jempty Nov 4 at 19:36
Arthur, please consider writing this up as an answer rather than a comment, and I will certainly upvote it and also probably accept it; so you can gain some reputation for your input. – George Jempty Nov 4 at 19:51
show 1 more comment

1 Answer

vote up 4 vote down check

The following code should work:

set data {CREATE TABLE}
foreach char [split $data ""] {
    lappend output [scan $char %c]
}
set output ;# 67 82 69 65 84 69 32 84 65 66 76 69

As far as the extra characters in your output, it seems like the problem is with your input data from the file. Is there some reason there would be null characters (\0) in between every character in the file?

link|flag
I'd begun to suspect that it might be an issue with the input, though there is no good reason for null characters between every character, except that it was generated with a Microsoft (SQL Server) tool ;) – George Jempty Nov 4 at 18:33
Then that's your answer. Most Microsoft tools (as well as Apple's, by the way), use UTF-16 as their internal encoding; UTF-16LE being far more widespread because that's the native Intel endianness. You need to tell Tcl to interpret the input file as UTF-16. Again, no idea how to do that, sorry, but you should look for keywords like “encoding” or “character set” or, generally speaking, Unicode, in the docs. – Arthur Reutenauer Nov 4 at 19:13
Think you might want to do: fconfigure $fp -encoding unicode after opening the file but before reading from it. – Colin Macleod Nov 4 at 21:52

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

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