4

I'm trying to write a code that extracts all words/strings between the and tags using strstr. But it seems that it just gets stuck to the first string extracted, which is "quick". How can I get the code to keep going after extracting the first string?

#include <stdio.h>
#include <string.h>

int main()
{

    char feed[] = "The <item> quick </item> brown <item> fox </item> jumps <item> over </item> the <item> lazy dog </item>";


    const char needle[] = "<item>";
    const char popo[] = "</item>";
    char *ret;
    char *ter;
    int n;
    n = 0;

    while (feed[n] != '\0')
    {
        ret = strstr(feed, needle)+6;
        ter = strstr(ret, popo);
        size_t len = ter - ret;
        char *res = (char*)malloc(sizeof(char)*(len+1));
        strncpy(res, ret, len);
        res[len] = '\0';

        printf("%s",res);
        n++;
    }
    return 0;
}
4
  • Heavy on the return key - Not so heavy on the spacebar - indent the code!
    – Ed Heal
    May 2, 2015 at 15:01
  • Do not cast malloc(). This, ret = strstr(feed, needle)+6; is dangerous, if strstr() reutrns NULL you end up with (void *)0x06 instead of (void *)0x00 and dereferencing that is a problem. Also, use memcpy() instead of strncpy() like memcpy(res, ret, len) and check that res != NULL before doing that. May 2, 2015 at 15:05
  • If I remove the +6, the output will include the string "<item>". May 2, 2015 at 15:13
  • You can add the length of <item> after you check ret != NULL, check my answer. May 2, 2015 at 15:15

2 Answers 2

2

You need to make the ret pointer to point to the current position in the string, and increment it by length on each iteration, and pass ret to the first strstr() instead of feed, check out this implementation

#include <stdio.h>
#include <string.h>

int main()
{

    char       feed[]   = "The <item> quick </item> brown <item> fox </item> "
                          "jumps <item> over </item> the <item> lazy dog </item>";
    const char needle[] = "<item>";
    const char popo[]   = "</item>";
    char      *head;
    int n;
    n = 0;

    head = feed;
    while (feed[n] != '\0')
    {
        char  *tail;
        char  *copy;
        size_t length;

        head = strstr(head, needle);
        /*            ^ always start at the current position. */
        if (head == NULL)
         {
            fprintf(stderr, "Invalid input...???\n");
            return -1;
         }
        tail   = strstr(head, popo);
        length = tail - head - 6;
        head  += 6;
        if (length < 0)
         {
            fprintf(stderr, "Invalid input...???\n");
            return -1;
         }
        copy = malloc(length + 1);
        if (copy != NULL)
         {
            memcpy(copy, head, length);
            copy[length] = '\0';

            printf("*%s*\n", copy);
            /* If you are not going to keep it, free it */
            free(copy);
         }
        head += length; /* <-- this is the imprtant thing */
        n++;
    }
    return 0;
}
3
  • Can I ask, which variable and in which part does the program extract the first word and get the result? I want to put each string in an array for use later on in the code May 2, 2015 at 16:59
  • you can do that in the /* If you are not going to keep it, free it */ by not freeing the pointer and storing it somewhere. May 2, 2015 at 17:14
  • When I do memcpy(meti[a].item, copy, length); after the copy[length] ='\0'; It only copies the last result of the program, or in other words, the last string enclosed in the last <item> </item> tags. Why does it go directly to the last? I need to copy each string extracted, starting from the first to the last, in an array to printf them later on. Please help May 3, 2015 at 13:41
1

On this line:

ret = strstr(feed, needle)+6;

You are always starting your search from the beginning of the feed string. You need to pass a different starting point to strstr, which you already have in ter. So you should be able to do something like this:

ter = feed;
while (ter != NULL) 
{
     ret = strstr(ter, needle) + 6;
...

With this the start of your search will keep moving farther down the feed string.

There are some other issues in your code:

  1. strstr() can return NULL if it doesn't find a match - you need to check for that or you program will crash.
  2. You need to free() the memory you malloc()
  3. As @iharob points out "Do not cast malloc()"
0

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