I have a buffer in which there are "random" numbers, separated by a coma. For example :
"1589.3,12478.359,485.39971" etc
I need to check the length of the decimal part and the integer part.
I made some research, and I decided to use the strtod() on my buffer, in order to get one number.
However, it doesn't work as intended. So I tried on a simple example :
int number;
char myNumber[10] = "3113.14";
number = strtod (myNumber,NULL);
printf("%d\n", number);
This prints 3113, so I made some research and I found that I should use %f because it's not an integer.
So I corrected it :
int number;
char myNumber[10] = "3113.14";
number = strtod (myNumber,NULL);
printf("%f\n", number);
And then it prints me 0.000000
I tried with a coma (,), with the dot from the regular jeyboard (.) and the dot from the numeric pad (.). They all give me the same result.
I am using dev c++ (I can't choose, I am not admin on my working station).
Thanks for your attention and your help :)
setlocale()
? The decimal point symbol is taken from the active locale (defaults to "C" if not explicitly configured)