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I am currently trying to read the count of each character in a file. The file is encrypted so it contains ascii values 0 to 255. My ultimate goal is to return the character that appeared the most.

The Problem

After reading through the file I print the array for debugging purposes. To my surprise the array only counts characters 0 - 127(Not extend character). All indexes past 127 are 0. Sadly the file contains a large amount of extended ascii. I do not know what the problem could be. I believe it would be in my comparsion or data type.

char breakKey(FILE * cryFile, int keyLength) {
    fseek(cryFile, 0, SEEK_SET);
    unsigned int count[256] = {0};
    char ch;
    int c = 0;
    while((ch = fgetc(cryFile)) != EOF){
        for(int i = 0; i < 255 ; i++){
            if(i == (int) ch) {
                count[i]++;             
            }   
        }
    }

    for(int i = 0; i < 255 ; i++){
        printf("%d : %d \n", i, count[i]);
    }

    return 0;
}
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  • ASCII does only have 7 bits. There are many codes which use additionally the upper 128 codes in a octet. Problem is one of the most common is UTF-8 (a Uincode encoding) which does use the 8th bit to signal multi-byte characters which allows to encode all Unicode characters (currently about 1Mio - actually 2**20). May 12, 2015 at 1:24

1 Answer 1

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The character ch can be signed or unsigned, according to the implementation. In your testing, it is apparently signed. Making it an int is standard practice, because EOF is a negative value which cannot be a character.

Along those lines, the loop to match the character against the array index is not effective. All you need to do is

count[(unsigned char)ch]++; 

rather than

for(int i = 0; i < 255 ; i++){
    if(i == (int) ch) {
        count[i]++;             
    }   
}
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  • Why not use unsigned instead of int? I think it is bad practice to cast an unsigned type to a signed without actual need. Also this would state clear the index will not be negative. May 12, 2015 at 1:27
  • If you use unsigned, the comparison against EOF will fail, without a cast. May 12, 2015 at 8:16
  • Just had a look at your answer, forgot to check code in the question. However, as fgetc() does return int which is casted to char (be it signed or unsigned). The comparision will be wrong anyway: if char is unsigned, i gets a value of 255 after the double conversion. If char is signed, i gets a negative value for any value above 127 returned by fgets, so any non-ASCII code will yield a negative index. The only correct way would be to have ch being int and after EOF-test cast it to an unsigned whatever - unsigned char might be appropriate, but size_t would be the correct choice. May 12, 2015 at 12:28
  • Point is: char cannot represent all possible results of fgetc() (the signed-ness does not increase the possible codes). That's why it returns int, which has at least 16 bits. All "successfull" results, however, do fit into a char. Its signed-ness does not care unless doing arithmetics with it. Indexing is actually (pointer-)arithmetic. May 12, 2015 at 12:33

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