14

The other day I created a post over at CodeReview. One person who answered my question suggested that I refrain from using strcasecmp() because the "function is non-standard [and] this makes [my] code non-portable." This is how I used it:

int playGame()
{

    char scanned[3];
    printf("Do you wish to play tick-tack-toe?\n");
    scanf("%s", scanned);
    if(strcasecmp(scanned,"yes")==0)
        startGame();

    else
    {
        if (strcasecmp(scanned,"no")==0 || strcasecmp(scanned,"nah")==0 || strcasecmp(scanned,"naw")==0)
        {
            printf("That's too bad!/nThis program will now end.");
            return 1;
        }
        printf("Not valid input!/nThis program will now end.");
        return 1;
    }
return 0;
}

Can someone explain more in-depth and why strcasecmp() has these limitations?

6
  • 3
    Why not just check the standard? Jun 29, 2015 at 23:45
  • 3
    But which standard is "THE" standard? The great thing about standards is that there are so many of them! The strcasecmp function is, in fact, defined in the libc standard library in BSD/POSIX.
    – Dan Korn
    Jun 30, 2015 at 0:10
  • Personally, I would just check if the first character is 'N' or 'n' and call it a day, instead of trying to account for specific instances of slang. But here we're bordering on a much larger problem of computers trying to parse human-generated text input.
    – Dan Korn
    Jun 30, 2015 at 0:30
  • 2
    @Dan-korn, aren't you so knowledgeable :P
    – SuperGoA
    Jun 30, 2015 at 0:34
  • 1
    When in doubt man 3 strcasecmp : "CONFORMING TO 4.4BSD, POSIX.1-2001." Jun 30, 2015 at 1:47

4 Answers 4

7

strcasecmp is not in the C or C++ standard. It's defined by POSIX.1-2001 and 4.4BSD.

If your system POSIX or BSD compliant, you'll have no problems. Otherwise, the function will be unavailable.

11
  • 2
    That's a complete misinterpretation. Read carefully: "Names starting with str followed by a lower-case letter are reserved by the C Standard". That means if you write a function named strcasewhatever, then you have just left the C Standard. strcmp is part of the C Standard.
    – gnasher729
    Jun 30, 2015 at 0:04
  • 2
    @SuperGoA: I meant what I said. The C standard defines strcmp() as one of its functions, and also reserves other names that start with str and a lower-case letter. POSIX steps on that reserved name space with strcasecmp(), but gets away with it. If you create a function strcasecmp(), you are not guaranteed to get away with it, but strCaseCmp() or str_casecmp() or str9cmp() is OK (str is not followed by a lower-case letter for any of those three). Of course, you still might run into problems if the system isn't as disciplined as it is supposed to be. Jun 30, 2015 at 0:06
  • 3
    Note that strcasecmp() was defined by the Single Unix Specification v2 in 1997. I'm not certain it was in POSIX at that time, but strcasecmp() has an even longer history than implied by the 2001 reference. Jun 30, 2015 at 0:12
  • 2
    It's less about the platform than it is about the C compiler and its libraries. You can install MinGW on Windows and call strcasecmp just like on Unix or OS X, even though it won't work if you're using Visual Studio. Or you can just #define strcasecmp stricmp, or vice-versa, as needed for the toolset.
    – Dan Korn
    Jun 30, 2015 at 0:13
  • 2
    The thing that you might need to worry about is, how does the runtime implementation of the function figure out which uppercase and lowercase characters are equivalent for its case-insensitive comparison? You might find that things all work fine for English strings, but if you give it strings with accents or diacriticals from other languages, such as German, French, Spanish, then whether it works may depend on the implementation, or on the "C" locale. Then there are wide-character languages like Japanese and Chinese; that's a whole 'nother story. Welcome to the Tower of Babel!
    – Dan Korn
    Jun 30, 2015 at 0:25
7

Short answer: As strcasecmp() is not in the C standard library, that make it non-standard.

strcasecmp() is defined in popular standards such as 4.4BSD, POSIX.1-2001.

The definition of case-less functions opens the door to the nit-picky details. These often involve the positive or negative result of case-less compares, not just the 0 or non-0 as used by OP. In particular:

In the POSIX locale, strcasecmp() and strncasecmp() shall behave as if the strings had been converted to lowercase and then a byte comparison performed. The results are unspecified in other locales.

The trouble with this is with upper and lower case letters that do not have a 1 to 1 mapping. Consider a local that has E, e and é but no É, yet toupper('é') -- > 'E' . Then with "as if the strings had been converted to lowercase", 'E' has 2 choices.

As a candidate portable solution consider one that round trips the letter (to upper then to lower) to cope with non 1-to-1 mappings:

int SGA_stricmp(const char *a, const char *b) {
  int ca, cb;
  do {
     ca = * (unsigned char *)a;
     cb = * (unsigned char *)b;
     ca = tolower(toupper(ca));
     cb = tolower(toupper(cb));
     a++;
     b++;
   } while (ca == cb && ca != '\0');
   return ca - cb;
}

If you do not want to round-trip the values use:

     ca = tolower(ca);
     cb = tolower(cb);

Detail: toupper() and tolower() only defined for int in the range of unsigned char and EOF. * (unsigned char *)a used as *a may have negative values.

1

"The function is non-standard" means, that the function declaration and contract aren't specified in The C International Standard.

"This makes code non-portable" means, that implementations aren't required to implement strcasecmp(), and therefore your code is not fully standard-compliant and not guaranteed to be compiled by strictly standard-conforming compilers.

strcasecmp() is itself a part of the POSIX.1-2001 and 4.4BSD specifications (link).

3
  • I'm sorry, but I don't understand this: "This makes code non-portable means, that implementations aren't required to implement strcasecmp()..." Why would implementations NOT be required if strcasecomp() is non-standard. It sounds, based on the first answer, that something 'special' (POSIX.1-2001 or 4.4BSD) is needed for it work.
    – SuperGoA
    Jun 30, 2015 at 0:09
  • 1
    He means that, if the function is not part of the C standard, then a C compiler that's conformant to the standard isn't required to implement it. So your code may not compile on every "standard" C compiler in the world.
    – Dan Korn
    Jun 30, 2015 at 0:21
  • 1
    @SuperGoA The International C Standard comes as a SINGLE document and describes literally EVERYTHING, that a standard-conformant C compiler MUST/MUST NOT/CAN/CAN NOT/SHOULD/SHOULD NOT do. A strictly-conforming C compiler will implement ONLY things from the standard. POSIX is, well, not a part of the standard, but a widely-accepted extension(specification). On most Windowses it's simply not implemented. Jun 30, 2015 at 1:09
-1

An alternative would be to canonize the input to lower case using tolower(), which is standard. Then you could use the standard strcmp().

1
  • 1
    Note that this can be functionally different than strcasecmp() when upper/lower case letters do not have 1-to-1 mappings. It depends on strcasecmp() specifications (it is not C standard) . Most strcasecmp() do use this tolower() approach for the default locale. Sep 21, 2017 at 20:40

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