I'm trying to fill an array of unsigned integers (32-bit) with short integers from another array (size is not fixed). I put the short ints one after the other in the output array which contains random values.
Here is my code:
#define K_LENGTH (37) // Arbitrary
void computeInput(unsigned short* input) {
unsigned int output[1000];
unsigned int i, j, gap;
j = 0;
gap = 0;
output[0] = 0;
for (i = 0; i < K_LENGTH; i++) {
output[j] |= (input[i] << gap);
if (gap) {
gap = 0;
j += 1;
output[j] = 0;
} else {
gap = 16;
}
}
// The rest of output array is set to 0
for (i = j, i < 1000, i++) {
output[i] = 0;
}
// Other stuff
}
First, the part of algorithm checking the gap value is quite ugly but I don't how to perform this efficiently. Second, I don't know how to ensure that the random values are erased/replaced by the input values.
Should I set the entire output array to 0 before computing input values? It seems inefficient.
short
as the destination instead? Orunion
it with array of integers, if you really want the integer access.short []
in the posted code. And assigning signed to unsigned integers is problematic for negative values.