This is what I wrote to check if input is a positive integer
#include <stdio.h>
#include <string.h>
#include <ctype.h>
int isInt(char num[3]) {
int l = strlen(num);
int x;
for ( x = 0; x < l; x++) {
if ( ! isdigit(num[x]) )
return 0;
}
return 1;
}
int main(void) {
int i;
char str[3];
printf("Enter a positive integer: ");
scanf("%s", str);
if ( isInt(str) == 1 ) {
i = atoi(str);
printf("%d \n", i);
} else {
printf("This is not a positive integer! \n");
}
return 0;
}
And I found some unexpected behaviors, even though the program seems to work:
Whether I
#include <ctype.h>
or not it makes no difference. How canisdigit()
function work without its library? (I'm on ubuntu 14.04 using gcc 4.9.3)if I impose
str
to be a a string of length 3 how is it possible that when I run./a.out
it checks correctly and prints also numbers bigger than 999? If I input 5678 shouldn'tstr
only save 567? Or maybe it saves the first 2^3 digits? I'm confusedif I want to check if a string is a positive integer but the number could be very big, how big should
str
be? Isn't there a way to make it as big as needed?
realloc()
as necessary.int l = strlen(num);
is wrong should besize_t l = strlen(num);
alsoscanf("%s", str);
should bescanf("%2s", str);