To read the equation you are showing, you really need to read two characters between the first sets of numbers (instead of one). So you would want to do
#include <stdio.h>
int main()
{
int number[3][4],i,j;
char vch[3][6];
for(i=0;i<3;i++){
printf("enter equation %d:\n", i);
scanf("%d %c %c %d %c %c %d %c %c %d",&number[i][0], &vch[i][0], &vch[i][1], \
&number[i][1], &vch[i][2], &vch[i][3], \
&number[i][2], &vch[i][4], &vch[i][5], \
&number[i][3]);
}
for(i=0;i<3;i++) {
for(j=0;j<4;j++)
printf("%4d ",number[i][j]);
printf("\n");
}
return 0;
}
output:
enter equation 0:
2x+3y+4z=0
enter equation 1:
2x+5y+10z=-15
enter equation 2:
5x+7y+9z=3
2 3 4 0
2 5 10 -15
5 7 9 3
EDIT an improved program that does not use scanf
and handles various other inputs could look like this:
#include <stdio.h>
#include <string.h>
int interpret(char* s) {
// interpret the string as a number
// if there is only a sign, return +1 or -1 as appropriate
int it;
if(sscanf(s, "%d", &it) == 1) return it;
// look for just a sign with no number
if( strstr(s, "-") > 0) return -1;
return 1;
}
void squeezeWhite(char* s) {
// remove all spaces
char *t = s;
int ii = 0;
while(*t !='\0') {
if (*t != ' ') s[ii++] = *t;
t++;
}
s[ii] = '\0';
}
void tokenize(char *buf, int *arr) {
char *temp;
int it;
squeezeWhite(buf);
temp = strtok(buf, "xyz");
// handle the case of nothing in front of x:
if(temp == buf + 1) {
arr[0] = 1;
arr[1] = interpret(temp);
}
else {
arr[0] = interpret(temp);
temp = strtok(NULL, "xyz");
arr[1] = interpret(temp);
}
temp = strtok(NULL, "xyz");
arr[2] = interpret(temp);
temp = strtok(NULL, "=");
arr[3] = interpret(temp);
}
int main()
{
int number[3][4],i,j;
char vch[3][6];
char buffer[100];
for(i=0;i<3;i++){
printf("enter equation %d:\n", i);
fgets(buffer, 100, stdin);
tokenize(buffer, number[i]);
}
for(i=0;i<3;i++) {
for(j=0;j<4;j++)
printf("%4d ",number[i][j]);
printf("\n");
}
return 0;
}
Example of input/output:
enter equation 0:
-x+y+z=1
enter equation 1:
2x + 3 y + 4 z = 7
enter equation 2:
+2x+2y+2z=+2
-1 1 1 1
2 3 4 7
2 2 2 2
As you can see it handles coefficients gracefully, even if there are no numbers (just + or - signs). The basic idea I am showing here - to process the input in steps - is a good idea when your user may not conform to your input specification. It is much more robust than reading scanf
, which will fall at the first hurdle. It did involve writing a few "helper functions". That's usually how it works...