2

I've an input string consisting of space separated numbers like "12 23 34".
Output should be an array of integers.

I tried the following:

while (sscanf(s, "%d", &d) == 1) {
    arr[n++] = d;
}

But I found that since I'm not reading from file (where offsets are adjusted automatically),
I keep storing the same number in d everytime.

Then I tried this:

while (sscanf(s, "%d", &d) == 1) {
    arr[n++] = d;
    s = strchr(s, ' ');
}

to manually shift s to a new number.
Which I believe should work fine. I simply don't understand why it fails.

1
  • if it is a constant number of numbers, you can use a macthing format string - "%d %d %d". if not, you can find the next space each time, and pass is as a first paramter to scanf.
    – Elazar
    May 28, 2013 at 21:39

2 Answers 2

5

scanf provides an elegant answer: the %n conversion, which tells you how many bytes have been consumed so far.

Use it like this:

int pos;
while (sscanf(s, "%d%n", &d, &pos) == 1) {
    arr[n++] = d;
    s += pos;
}
0
2

The second trick should indeed work with minor modifications. See comments in the code for explanation of what needs to change:

while (sscanf(s, "%d", &d) == 1) {
    arr[n++] = d;
    s = strchr(s, ' ');
    // strchr returns NULL on failures. If there's no further space, break
    if (!s) break;
    // Advance one past the space that you detected, otherwise
    // the code will be finding the same space over and over again.
    s++;
}

A better approach to tokenizing sequences of numbers is strtol, which helps you advance the pointer after reading the next integer:

while (*s) {
    arr[n++] = strtol(s, &s, 10);
}
2
  • What happens if s in sscanf is NULL?
    – mohit
    May 28, 2013 at 21:45
  • 1
    @mohit I doubt that it's a defined behavior. The problem with not testing for NULL right away in my modification of the code is not that you pass NULL to sscanf, but that you'd compute NULL+1 on the last line of the loop, which is definitely wrong. May 28, 2013 at 21:49

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