Taking an input as hex string and then converting it to char string in C. The hex string can contain 0x00 which translates to an 0 in Ascii when converted. This terminates the string. I have to store the value in an char string because the API uses that.
My code so far:
int hex_to_int(unsigned char c) {
int first =0;
int second =0;
int result=0;
if(c>=97 && c<=102)
c-=32;
first=c / 16 - 3;
second =c % 16;
result = first*10 + second;
if(result > 9) result--;
return result;
}
unsigned char hex_to_ascii(unsigned char c, unsigned char d){
unsigned char a='0';
int high = hex_to_int(c) * 16;
int low = hex_to_int(d);
a= high+low;
return a;
}
unsigned char* HextoString(unsigned char *st){
int length = strlen((const char*)st);
unsigned char* result=(unsigned char*)malloc(length/2+1);
unsigned char arr[500];
int i;
unsigned char buf = 0;
int j=0;
for(i = 0; i < length; i++)
{
if(i % 2 != 0)
{
arr[j++]=(unsigned char)hex_to_ascii(buf, st[i]);
}
else
{
buf = st[i];
}
}
arr[length/2+1]='\0';
memcpy(result,arr,length/2+1);
return result;
}
NUL
character (ASCII value = 0) and the'0'
character (ASCII value = 48)? Show your code. Without the code the question is unclear. – Jabberwocky Jul 24 '17 at 12:45char *
), keep track of the capacity and the current length. Please edit your question with more context to get better answers. – Tom Blodget Jul 24 '17 at 16:11