At the moment I got this simple code in C to convert days, minutes and seconds to seconds only:
EDITED (I understood the problem with atoi, like this is corrected right?):
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
int getseconds(char * time)
{
int seconds=0, i=0;
char buffer[3];
while (*time != '\0')
{
switch (*time)
{
case 'h': buffer[i]='\0';i=0;seconds=seconds+atoi(buffer)*3600;break;
case 'm': buffer[i]='\0';i=0;seconds=seconds+atoi(buffer)*60;break;
case 's': buffer[i]='\0';i=0;seconds=seconds+atoi(buffer);break;
case ' ':break;
default: buffer[i]=*time;i++;break;
}
time++;
}
return seconds;
}
int main()
{
char *time = "12h 4m 58s";
int seconds = getseconds(time);
printf("%d",seconds);
return 0;
}
This is working as I want, but there isn't another way to do it, without creating more variables (like C# where I just need to convert "inline". Does C only have functions that convert to variables and not to "inline")?
C# Example:
string time = "12h 34m 58s";
int seconds = int.Parse(time.Substring(0, 2)) * 3600 + int.Parse(time.Substring(4, 2)) * 60 + int.Parse(time.Substring(8, 2));
You can spot the number of lines difference I guess :).
buffer
does not hold a string in this code (a string being a sequence of chars followed by a\0
); if the garbage after it happens to be a digit, then atoi won't return what you expect.atoi
takes a c-style string. A c-style string ends with a\0
. So yes it is needed.