The key problem is s[j]==i
. That compares a char
of the string to the values 0 to 9 ratter than to char
'0'
to '9'
.
Another is the c
is not reset to zero each loop.
Instead of looping 10 times, test if the char
is a digit.
Instead of calling j<strlen(s)
repeatedly, just test if s[j] == 0
size_t digit_frequency[10] = {0};
for (size_t i=0; s[i]; i++) {
if (isdigit((unsigned char) s[i])) {
// or if (s[i] >= '0' && s[i] <= '9') {
digit_frequency[s[i] - '0']++;
}
}
for (size_t i=0; i<10; i++) {
pritnf("%zu\n", s[i]);
}
Code uses size_t
rather than int
as a string's length is limited to size_t
- which may exceed int
in extreme cases. Either work OK work size 100.
isdigit()
declared in <ctype.h>
(unsigned char)
used as isdigit()
expect a value in the (unsigned char)
and EOF
and a char
may be negative.
Various style choices - all function the same.
for (size_t i=0; s[i]; i++) {
for (size_t i=0; s[i] != '\0'; i++) {
for (size_t i=0; s[i] != 0; i++) {
"Given a string consisting of alphabets and digits" is a minor contraction. In C, a string includes the final null character: "A string is a contiguous sequence of characters terminated by and including the first null character" C11 §7.1.1 1. Yet folks often speak colloquially as is the null character was not part of the string.