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Hello,

I am working on a project where I can to convert a api digit to a char. I have used an array of string pointers to get the conversion. However, I want to return just a single ch, as my api that I am using will only accept a char. So ap_five will return "5". But I want to five to be a single char '5'.

I thought maybe I could cast to a char in the return. However, I just get rubbish.

I am sure there is other ways to solve this, how I am just wondering how can I solve with my present program.

Many thanks for any advice,

char *digits_conversion[][2]=
{
    {"ap_zero", "0"},
    {"ap_one", "1"},
    {"ap_two", "2"},
    {"ap_three", "3"},
    {"ap_four", "4"},
    {"ap_five", "5"},
    {"ap_six", "6"},
    {"ap_seven", "7"},
    {"ap_eight", "8"},
    {"ap_nine", "9"},
    {"ap_star", "*"},
    {"ap_hash", "#"},
    {NULL, NULL}
};

char convert_to_char(const char *digit)
{
    int i = 0;
    for(i = 0; *digits_conversion[i][1]; i++)
    {
	    if(strcmp(digits_conversion[i][0], digit) == 0)
	    {
		    return (char) digits_conversion[i][1];
 	    }
    }

    return '\0';
}

int main(void)
{
    char ch;

    ch = convert_to_char("ap_five");

    printf("Converted digit: %c\n", ch);

    return 0;
}
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4 Answers

vote up 7 vote down check

The simplest fix to your existing code is just to change:

return (char) digits_conversion[i][1];

into

return digits_conversion[i][1][0];

However, you might find that changing digits_conversion into an array of structures will give you code that is easier to understand and maintain. For example:

struct digit_mapping {
    char *api_name;
    char digit;
};
struct digit_mapping conversion_table[] = {
    { "ap_zero", '0' },
    {"ap_one", '1'},
    {"ap_two", '2'},
    {"ap_three", '3'},
    {"ap_four", '4'},
    {"ap_five", '5'},
    {"ap_six", '6'},
    {"ap_seven", '7'},
    {"ap_eight", '8'},
    {"ap_nine", '9'},
    {"ap_star", '*'},
    {"ap_hash", '#'},
    {NULL, '\0'}
};

char convert_to_char(const char *digit)
{
    int i = 0;
    for(i = 0; conversion_table[i].digit; i++)
    {
            if(strcmp(conversion_table[i].api_name, digit) == 0)
            {
                    return conversion_table[i].digit;
            }
    }

    return '\0';
}

int main(void)
{
    char ch;

    ch = convert_to_char("ap_five");

    printf("Converted digit: %c\n", ch);

    return 0;
}
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I am new to c programming as I am coming from .Net. However, digits_conversion[i][1][0]; that worked. But I can't see how it works. Why does indexing a third element give the char? Where did the third element come from when I have a 2 dimensional array? Thanks, – robUK Apr 2 at 17:16
@robUK: strings in C are character arrays, so using 2 subscripts gets you down to (for example) "8" or "#", and then the third subscript [0] gives you the first character in the string "#" which is '#'. – Sean Bright Apr 2 at 17:39
@robUK: A String in C is, practically speaking, just an array of characters. So, grabbing the item at index 0 of the String will return a character, the first character in the String. That bottommost array layer, the array of characters comprising a String, is abstracted away when you use a String. – Evan Hanson Apr 2 at 17:42
vote up 0 vote down

The termination of your 'for' loop looks incorrect:

//...
    {"NULL", "NULL"}
//...
//...
for(i = 0; *digits_conversion[i][1]; i++)
//...

The "NULL" you've got at the end of your array is literally, the string "NULL". If you pass a string that doesn't match any of the "ap_zero" through "ap_hash" your program will likely crash as the loop starts dereferencing garbage beyond the end of your array.

Eric fixed this in his example, but I thought I'd point this out specifically.

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Thanks for pointing that out. I guess I was too quick then I was typing it in here. I have now edited my code. – robUK Apr 2 at 17:26
vote up 2 vote down
return digits_conversion[i][1][0];
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vote up 3 vote down
digits_conversion[i][1]

is a C-style string. Use:

digits_conversion[ i ][ 1 ][ 0 ] // if you want the character 

char convert_to_char(const char *digit)
{
    int i = 0;
    for(i = 0; *digits_conversion[i][1]; i++)
    {
            if(strcmp(digits_conversion[i][0], digit) == 0)
            {
                    return digits_conversion[i][1][0];
            }
    }

    return '\0';
}
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