I'm trying to reverse a large integer (>100 digits). I wish to implement it in such a way that the trailing zeroes in the original number are neglected. ie: reverse(2130200) gives 20312. My question is, how to implement reverse() in such a way that the trailing zeroes in the large integer are not added neglected. Eg: reverse(20301205500) gives 550210302
This is the code I implemented for small values.
#include <iostream>
using namespace std;
int myreverse(int num)
{
int rev=0;
while(num)
{
rev=rev*10+(num%10);
num/=10;
}
return rev;
}
int main()
{
int num;
cin>>num;
int a1 = myreverse(num);
cout<<a1<<endl;
return 0;
}
int
can't hold a number with 100 digits. Why don't you operate on strings?std::string
,std::reverse
, andfind_last_not_of
.reverse
function taking those iterators and sub it in.std::string
. But if you are planning to perform arithmetic operations on it, then you'll need to use some sort of "BigInteger" class. You can see an example of such class in here: github.com/barakman/Num.