3

I'm unable to find bug in this C program.

#include <stdio.h>

int main()
{ 

    struct book 
    { 
        char name ; 
        float price ; 
        int pages ; 
    } ;

    struct book b[3] ;
    int i ; int k;
    for ( i = 0 ; i <= 2 ; i++ )
    { 
        printf ( "\nEnter name, price and pages: " ) ;
        k = scanf ( "%c %f %d", &b[i].name, &b[i].price, &b[i].pages ) ;
    } 
    for ( i = 0 ; i <= 2 ; i++ ) 
        printf ( "\n%c %f %d", b[i].name, b[i].price, b[i].pages ) ;
    //getch();
    return 0;
}

run time:

Enter name, price and pages: a 1 1

Enter name, price and pages: b 2 2

Enter name, price and pages:
a 1.000000 1

 7922540190797673100000000000000000.000000 4200368
b 2.000000 2

I wanted to give a 1 1 , b 2 2, c 3 3 as my inputs for each scanfs but it didn't wait for my input in 3rd scanf. Why so? and why did it read my 2nd time input into 3rd elementof array?

4
  • 4
    And now you're discovering why NOBODY uses scanf. Jul 31, 2010 at 14:45
  • @Paul Tomblin: Shocked! NOBODY uses scanf?? why?? What exactly is happening here. What am I missing here?
    – walter
    Jul 31, 2010 at 14:47
  • 4
    @walter Nobody uses scanf for processing input from humans.
    – anon
    Jul 31, 2010 at 14:57
  • 2
    scanf doesn't behave well if it doesn't get EXACTLY what it's asking for. I think what's happening in your case is it's accepting the return at the end of the line as the first character second array, then going off into the weeds from there, as it is wont to do. Jul 31, 2010 at 15:04

3 Answers 3

8

Add a getchar() after your scanf()

 for ( i = 0 ; i <= 2 ; i++ )
  { 
      printf ( "\nEnter name, price and pages: " ) ;
      k = scanf ( "%c %f %d", &b[i].name, &b[i].price, &b[i].pages ) ;

      getchar(); //will clear the buffer
  } 

P.S: Don't use scanf() for char entry.

0
7

Unlike the other specifiers, %c when used with scanf does not ignore whitespace. You probably want to make the name fields strings in any case:

#include <stdio.h>

int main()
{ 
    struct book 
    { 
        char name[10] ;   // or some suitable size
        float price ; 
        int pages ; 
    } ;

    struct book b[3] ;
    int i ; int k;
    for ( i = 0 ; i <= 2 ; i++ )
    { 
        printf ( "\nEnter name, price and pages: " ) ;
        k = scanf ( "%s %f %d", b[i].name, &b[i].price, &b[i].pages ) ;
    } 
    for ( i = 0 ; i <= 2 ; i++ ) 
        printf ( "\n%s %f %d", b[i].name, b[i].price, b[i].pages ) ;
    return 0;
}
0

You can add fflush(stdin); before your scanf..

It turns out that you should not use fflush on stdin because fflush is only defined to work on output streams. In other words fflush has undefined behaviour on input streams.

int fflush(FILE *ostream);

an extract from the C standard says:

ostream points to an output stream or an update stream in which the most recent operation was not input, the fflush function causes any unwritten data for that stream to be delivered to the host environment to be written to the file; otherwise, the behavior is undefined.

5
  • No, you can't - fflush is only defined to work on output streams.
    – anon
    Jul 31, 2010 at 14:55
  • 1
    fflush(stdin) invokes Undefined Behaviour. Jul 31, 2010 at 14:55
  • Wrong, although it may work: faq.cprogramming.com/cgi-bin/…
    – siride
    Jul 31, 2010 at 14:57
  • 2
    Sure, if you can call fflush(stdin);, but you're taking the chance of demons flying out your nose. urbandictionary.com/define.php?term=nasal%20demons Jul 31, 2010 at 15:02
  • @Paul Tomblin: seems pretty clear that "behavior is undefined" implies "wrong", unless you think that writing programs based on undefined behavior is right.
    – siride
    Jul 31, 2010 at 15:29

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