0
#include <stdio.h>
#define N 100

int main()
{
 int n,c,d,a[N],b[N];

printf("Insert elements numbers in the array\n");
 scanf("%d ", n);

printf("Insert the elements in the array\n");

for (c = 0; c < n ; c++)
scanf("%d", a[c]);

for (c=n-1,d = 0;d < n; c--,d++)
b[d]= a[c];

for(c = 0; c <n; c++)
a[c] = b[n];

printf("The array inverted is\n");

for(c=0; c<n;c++)
printf("%d\n",a[c]);

return 0;
}

why is that crashing ? i've tried even if with values ( N < 100 ) but that still crashes , i don't know how to fix it ? can someone help me please ? thanks !

1
  • 5
    scanf("%d ", n); must be scanf("%d", &n); Feb 10, 2014 at 16:25

4 Answers 4

6

This:

scanf("%d ", n);

invokes undefined behavior. scanf() needs a pointer to where the number should be stored, it should be:

scanf("%d ", &n);

The same goes for the rest of your scanf() calls. Also, you should check the return value to know that it succeeded in reading the data in, before relying on the variables containing valid values.

0
3

scanf needs the address to write to, not the actual value.

Do this instead:

scanf("%d", &a[c]);
0

What they said about scanf needing an address. But also, what is this doing?

for(c = 0; c <n; c++)
  a[c] = b[n];

n is the number of elements in each array, so calling b[n] will give you a (possibly unannounced) problem. The compiler tends to not warn about that kind of out-of-bounds access (see this post).

I suspect you intended to copy b into a anyway, and not copy one value to every element of a, but that's purely speculation since you haven't declared what the expected input or output is.

0

why is that crashing ?

Wiki says:

A crash (or system crash) in computing is when a computer or a program (such as a software application or an operating system) stops functioning properly. Oftentimes, it will then exit after encountering these errors. The program responsible may appear to freeze until a crash reporting service documents the details of the crash. If the program is a critical part of the operating system kernel, the entire computer may crash, often resulting in a fatal system error. This behavior is called "crashing".

Typical errors that result in application crashes include:

  • attempting to read or write memory that is not allocated for reading or writing by that application (segmentation fault) or x86 specific (general protection fault)
  • attempting to execute privileged or invalid instructions
  • attempting to perform I/O operations on hardware devices to which it does not have permission to access
  • passing invalid arguments to system calls
  • attempting to access other system resources to which the application does not have permission to access (bus error)
  • attempting to execute machine instructions with bad arguments (depending on CPU architecture): divide by zero, operations on denorms or NaN values, memory access to unaligned addresses, etc.

In your program, the statements

scanf("%d ", n);  

and

scanf("%d", a[c]);  

causing your program to crash.

As others suggested place & operator before the scanf arguments

scanf("%d ", &n); 
scanf("%d", &a[c]); 

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

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