Stack Overflow! I am on my learning process with the C technology. I have a function which gets an input file, seeks through the file and writes the contents to the output file without the comments. The function works but it also brakes at some cases. My Function:
void removeComments(char* input, char* output)
{
FILE* in = fopen(input,"r");
FILE* out = fopen(ouput,"w");
char c;
while((c = fgetc(in)) != EOF)
{
if(c == '/')
{
c = fgetc(in);
if(c == '/')
{
while((c = fgetc(in)) != '\n');
}
else
{
fputc('/', out);
}
}
else
{
fputc(c,out);
}
}
fclose(in);
fclose(out);
}
But when I give a file like this as input:
// Parameters: a, the first integer; b the second integer.
// Returns: the sum.
int add(int a, int b)
{
return a + b; // An inline comment.
}
int sample = sample;
When removing the inline comment it fails to reach the '\n' for some reason and it gives output:
int add(int a, int b)
{
return a + b; }
int sample = sample;
[EDIT] Thanks for helping me! It works with the case I posted but it brakes in another. Current code:
FILE* in = fopen(input,"r");
FILE* out = fopen(output,"w");
if (in == NULL) {
printf("cannot read %s\n", input);
return; /* change signature to return 0 ? */
}
if (out == NULL) {
printf("cannot write in %s\n", output);
return; /* change signature to return 0 ? */
}
int c;
int startline = 1;
while((c = fgetc(in)) != EOF)
{
if(c == '/')
{
c = fgetc(in);
if(c == '/')
{
while((c = fgetc(in)) != '\n')
{
if (c == EOF) {
fclose(in);
fclose(out);
return; /* change signature to return 1 ? */
}
}
if (! startline)
fputc('\n', out);
startline = 1;
}
else if (c == EOF)
break;
else {
fputc('/', out);
startline = 0;
}
}
else
{
fputc(c,out);
startline = (c == '\n');
}
}
fclose(in);
fclose(out);
When the file contains division the second variable disappears. Example:
int divide(int a, int b)
{
return a/b;
}
It gives back:
int divide(int a, int b)
{
return a/;
}
//
" appears in a string literal (where it's not a comment)// this comment continues \
(with the backslash immediately before a newline) means that the one line comment continues onto at least the next line. The similar structure at the start of a comment — a string containing"/\\\n/ This is a comment\n"
where there is a backslash-newline sequence (or multiple BSNL sequences) between the first and second slashes also marks the start of a comment. Granted, the programmer who writes such code should be shot, hung, drawn and quartered, but some programs need to be bullet-proof. Your call on whether to worry about it.