Following is my code, when I enter "carol chen", I expect it will print out 9 characters, but it print out 10.
The name you enter is: carol chen
The number of characters in the user's name is 10
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <string.h>
int main(){
char *name;
int i;
int n = 0;
name= (char *)calloc(80, sizeof(char));
if(name == NULL) {
printf("\nOut of memory!\n");
return 1;
}
else {
printf("The name you enter is: ");
scanf("%79[0-9a-zA-Z ]", name);
for(i=0; i<80; i++){
if(name[i] != 0){
n += 1;
}
}
printf("\nThe number of characters in the user's name is %d\n", n);
}
free(name);
}
calloc()
andfree()
when simply writingchar name[80];
would give you as much space with far less overhead.scanf()
et al. If your variable ischar name[80];
, the format string should be"%79s"
— you specify the number of characters excluding the trailing null. This is a sad inconsistency with other functions, but was frozen long before the C standard was defined (circa 1979), and changing it would have broken working code. (That's howgets()
survived until C11 too — backwards compatibility!)