How is this even possible? One of my textbook questions (studying for an exam here) claim you can do this and ask the following:
Write a function that accepts a string. The function should convert the string to an integral number. If it cannot convert return 0.
Example 1: 8976 returns the value of
((((8*10 + 9) *10)+ 7 )* 10) + 6
Example 2: 67A returns a value of 0
How can this be done? I know you can use the atoi()
function but the book wants this to be done without any functions?
Edit: Some further thinking:
int i, ans;
char number[5]="8976";
for(i=0;i<strlen(number);i++)
ans=(ans*10)+(number[i]-'0');
Would the above work?
atoi()
;strtol()
et al;sscanf()
; etc.ans
.ans = 0
before you start using it; you probably need to validate thatnumber[i]
is a digit. Otherwise, it is about right, though it has no error checking for overflows, negative numbers, explicitly positive numbers (+123), etc. You don't report an error (setans
to zero) for67A
. And usingstrlen()
in the loop like that is sub-optimal; the string length does not change, so addint len = strlen(number);
and compare withlen
instead ofstrlen(number)
in the loop.#include <ctype.h>
andisdigit((unsigned char)number[i])
.