While working with pointers in C, I have been experiencing a very incosistent result, I am working with a token which is a byte string which i need to make a directory path. a token consists of the date as a prefix in the format of 20101129(2010-oct-29) and then a 20byte string follows, thus a token would look like 20101102A2D8B328CX9RDTBDE373, the method is supposed to return a path that looks like 2010/11/02/A2D8/B328/CX9R/DTBD/E373.
Now with the method that i used in the code provided below, returns strings which have unwanted characters while the code looks OK, the code is provided below
#include <stdio.h>
#include <string.h>
#include <unistd.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#define token "20101102A2D8B328CX9RDTBDE373"
#define SLASH "/"
int main()
{
char *mainstring = (char*)malloc(strlen(token));
char *nextstring = (char*)malloc(strlen(token));
char tokenarr[50] = token;
char patharr[50];
char pathmem[50];
char *fullstring = (char*)malloc(strlen(token));
char yrstr[4]="";
char yrmem[4]="";
char yrarr[4]="";
char monstr[2]="";
char monmem[2]="";
char monarr[2]="";
char daystr[2]="";
char daymem[2]="";
char dayarr[2]="";
memcpy(mainstring,token,strlen(tok开发者_开发技巧en));
memcpy(yrarr,tokenarr,4);
strncpy(yrstr,mainstring,4);
memcpy(yrmem,mainstring,4);
puts(yrarr);
puts(yrstr);
puts(yrmem);
mainstring = mainstring +4;
memcpy(monarr,tokenarr+4,2);
strncpy(monstr,mainstring,2);
memcpy(monmem,mainstring,2);
puts(monarr);
puts(monstr);
puts(monmem);
mainstring = mainstring+2;
memcpy(dayarr,tokenarr+6,2);
strncpy(daystr,mainstring,2);
memcpy(daymem, mainstring,2);
puts(dayarr);
puts(daystr);
puts(daymem);
strcat(patharr,yrarr); strcat(pathmem,yrmem);
strcat(patharr,"/"); strcat(pathmem,SLASH);
strcat(patharr,monarr);strcat(pathmem,monmem);
strcat(patharr,"/"); strcat(pathmem,SLASH);
strcat(patharr,dayarr); strcat(pathmem,daymem);
puts(patharr);
puts(pathmem);
mainstring = mainstring +2;
int i;
for(i=0;i<5;i++)
{
memcpy(nextstring,mainstring,4);
mainstring = mainstring +4;
printf("The %d th string is:",i+1);
puts(nextstring); strcat(fullstring,"/");
strcat(fullstring, nextstring);
puts(fullstring);
}
strcat(patharr,fullstring);
strcat(pathmem,fullstring);
puts(patharr);
puts(pathmem);
return 0;
}
The results from the code are:
2010
2010 2010 11 11m�� 11 02m 02 02 2010/11/02m ��m�� 2010 /11/02 The 1 th string is:A2D8 /A2D8 The 2 th string is:B328 /A2D8/B328 The 3 th string is:CX9R /A2D8/B328/CX9R The 4 th string is:DTBD /A2D8/B328/CX9R/DTBD The 5 th string is:E373 /A2D8/B328/CX9R/DTBD/E373 2010/11/02m /A2D8/B328/CX9R/DTBD/E373 ��m�� 2010 /11/02/A2D8/B328/CX9R/DTBD/E373My main question is, why is it that the characters are included in the resulting strings? what i'm i doing wrong with the pointers?
strlen
returns the length of the string, not including the NULL terminator; therefore memcpy
is not copying that, so the resulting string is not terminated. The same applies with your malloc
s.
You either need to use strlen() + 1
, or use strcpy()
.
Strings in C are terminated by a null character ('\0'
). Various strings you are using (such as yrstr
) are not large enough to contain this null character, and you're not putting a null character into them.
For example, when you do this
strncpy(yrstr,mainstring,4);
no null character gets added to the string because strncpy
omit the null character if there is not enough space in the destination string. You need to add the null character yourself, for example like this:
yrstr[4]='\0';
This requires yrstr
to be large enough to contain at least five characters.
If your goal is to convert "20101102A2D8B328CX9RDTBDE373" into "2010/11/02/A2D8/B328/CX9R/DTBD/E373" then one way would be as follows;
// source string YYYYMMDD<20-char token>
char *src = "20101102A2D8B328CX9RDTBDE373";
// destination string, alloc space for source + 7 slashes + 1 null terminator
char *dest = (char *)calloc(1, strlen(src) + 7 + 1);
// now copy elements of src to dest, inserting intermediate slashes
<your code here>
Thanks to your input, the results have now been consistent. would like to thank all that participated and contributed in helping me. I am posting code which includes all your input for the next learner to pick up from it. here goes:
#include <stdio.h>
#include <string.h>
#include <unistd.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#define token "20101102A2D8B328CX9RDTBDE373"
#define SLASH "/"
int main()
{
char *mainstring = (char*)malloc(strlen(token));
char *nextstring = (char*)malloc(strlen(token));
char tokenarr[50] = token;
char patharr[50];
char pathmem[50];
char *fullstring = (char*)malloc(strlen(token));
patharr[50]='\0';
char yrstr[5];
char monstr[3];
char daystr[3];
yrstr[4] ='\0';
monstr[2]='\0';
daystr[2]='\0';
memcpy(mainstring,token,strlen(token)+1);
strncpy(yrstr,mainstring,4);
mainstring = mainstring +4;
strncpy(monstr,mainstring,2);
mainstring = mainstring+2;
strncpy(daystr,mainstring,2);
puts(yrstr);
puts(monstr);
puts(daystr);
mainstring = mainstring +2;
int i;
for(i=0;i<5;i++)
{
memcpy(nextstring,mainstring,4);
mainstring = mainstring +4;
printf("The %d th string is:",i+1);
puts(nextstring);strcat(fullstring,SLASH);
strcat(fullstring, nextstring);
puts(fullstring);
}
return 0;
}
The result is:
2010
11
02
The 1 th string is:A2D8
2010/11/02/A2D8
The 2 th string is:B328
2010/11/02/A2D8/B328
The 3 th string is:CX9R
2010/11/02/A2D8/B328/CX9R
The 4 th string is:DTBD
2010/11/02/A2D8/B328/CX9R/DTBD
The 5 th string is:E373
2010/11/02/A2D8/B328/CX9R/DTBD/E373
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