1

I have a function that reads lines from a file and stores each string in each line in a vector.

void openf(std::string s)
{
std::string line;
std::string b;
std::ifstream in;
in.open(s);
std::vector<std::string> vec;
if(in.is_open()) {
    std::cout << "File is open\n" << std::endl;
    while(std::getline(in,line)) {
        for(decltype(line.size()) i = 0; i != line.size(); ++i) {
            if(isspace(line[i]) || ispunct(line[i])) {
                vec.push_back(b);
                b = "";
            }
            else {
                b += line[i];
            }
        }
    }
}
for(auto a:vec)
    std::cout << a << std::endl;
in.close();
}

This WORKS.

But if instead I do this

if(!isspace(line[i]) || !ispunct(line[i])) {
    b += line[i];
}
else {
    vec.push_back(b);
    b = "";
}

Nothing prints.

If I don't have the logical OR statements, and just use !isspace and !ispunct individually the program behaves as it expects in the respective cases.

I don't think I am required but I also tried putting () around each operator so it wouldn't interfere with the other each other. Still won't work.

It seems like the same code. Why won't it work in one case and while it works in another?

4 Answers 4

12

You have:

if (A || B)
    do this
else
    do that

To negate that, you need:

if (!(A || B))
    do that
else
    do this

And !(A || B) works out to (!A && !B)

So you need to write

if (!isspace(line[i]) && !ispunct(line[i]))

See DeMorgan's Laws for more info.

3
  • 1
    That is too easy to get a +1 (anyway)
    – user2249683
    Sep 3, 2013 at 18:38
  • And to think I wasted all that time trying to figure out why thinking it was a syntax problem instead of a logic problem.
    – Mars
    Sep 3, 2013 at 18:39
  • 2
    @Comrade - I think you tied yourself into !s thinking about it.
    – Hot Licks
    Sep 3, 2013 at 18:50
5

Ref- De-Morgan's Law

Change || to &&

(!A && !B) = !(A || B)

So use,

(!isspace(line[i]) && !ispunct(line[i]))
                   ^^

in your second way

3

That's not the inverse of the condition you're checking in the working code. This is:

if(!isspace(line[i]) && !ispunct(line[i])) {
  b += line[i];
}
else {
  vec.push_back(b);
  b = "";
}

! isspace(x) || ! ispunct(x) will always be true. A space won't be punctuation; puncuation won't be space.

1
  • +1 for pointing that out !isspace(x) || !ispunct(x) will always be true. Sep 3, 2013 at 18:51
1

Should be:

if( !(isspace(line[i]) or ispunct(line[i])) )
    b += line[i];
else {
    vec.push_back(b);
    b = "";
}

See this post

3
  • or? I think you meant ||. Sep 3, 2013 at 18:50
  • @JimMischel - Not necessarily. or is often defined as a synonym for ||.
    – Hot Licks
    Sep 3, 2013 at 18:51
  • 1
    Yes, I'm aware that people often abuse the preprocessor to contort the language into weird shapes. I was just pointing out that or is not the standard C++ notation. Those who are not familiar with whatever custom header files you're using won't understand your code. For example, a non-English speaker might not know that or is a synonym for ||. Sep 3, 2013 at 20:27

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