We have a program that will take a file as input, and then count the lines in that file, but without counting the empty lines.
There is already a post in Stack Overflow with this question, but the answer to that doesn't cover me.
Let's take a simple example.
File:
I am John\n
I am 22 years old\n
I live in England\n
If the last '\n' didn't exist, then the counting would be easy. We actually already had a function that did this here:
/* Reads a file and returns the number of lines in this file. */
uint32_t countLines(FILE *file) {
uint32_t lines = 0;
int32_t c;
while (EOF != (c = fgetc(file))) {
if (c == '\n') {
++lines;
}
}
/* Reset the file pointer to the start of the file */
rewind(file);
return lines;
}
This function, when taking as input the file above, counted 4 lines. But I only want 3 lines.
I tried to fix this in many ways.
First I tried by doing fgets
in every line and comparing that line with the string "\0". If a line was just "\0" with nothing else, then I thought that would solve the problem.
I also tried some other solutions but I can't really find any.
What I basically want is to check the last character in the file (excluding '\0') and checking if it is '\n'. If it is, then subtract 1 from the number of lines it previously counted (with the original function). I don't really know how to do this though. Are there any other easier ways to do this?
I would appreciate any type of help. Thanks.