I have written a program, which is reading all the numbers from a .txt
file - it is working fine. However, I would like to use only one sscanf
function in my program reading all the numbers instead of using isdigit(*poi)
and sscanf
again.
If I don't use isdigit(*poi)
, I will not get the numbers, which would be at the beginning of a line in the .txt
file.
How can I tell sscanf
to keep reading even if there is no string to match?
Code:
int test(FILE *file, FILE *file2){
int l = 0;
int nc = 0;
char buffer[1000];
char *poi = NULL;
fprintf(file2, "\n");
while(fgets(buffer, 1000, file) != NULL){
poi = buffer;
while(*poi){
if(isdigit(*poi)){
sscanf(poi, "%d%n",&zahl[l].number, &nc);
poi += nc;
fprintf(file2, "%d ", zahl[l].number);
}
if(1 == sscanf(poi, "%*[^0-9]%d%n",&zahl[l].number, &nc)){
poi += nc;
fprintf(file2, "%d ", zahl[l].number);
}
else{
break;
}
l++;
}
fprintf(file2, "\n");
}
return 0;
}
Sample text in .txt
:
text 2025 text text 25 text text text 1h text
26 text text text text 4,5h.
text text text text 19h
Output should be:
2025 25 1
26 4 5
19
Appending of would be fine:
if(1 == sscanf(poi, "%*[^0-9]%d%n",&zahl[l].number, &nc)){
poi += nc;
fprintf(file2, "%d ", zahl[l].number);
}
Instead of using :
if(isdigit(*poi)){
sscanf(poi, "%d%n",&zahl[l].number, &nc);
poi += nc;
fprintf(file2, "%d ", zahl[l].number);
}
scanf
, but it gets tricky and error prone. See, for example, this article: sekrit.de/webdocs/c/beginners-guide-away-from-scanf.html. In favour of writing understandable code, I'd usescanf
to parse only when you are sure what you are parsing, e.g. a number, and even in such cases, I'd prefer strtol or similar functions.