Hi guys,
Does atoi work like this: it scans an array element by element 0=49 1=50 2=51 converts these ascii values 49 50 and 51 into there digit equivalents and add each one to an identifier/varriable.
Thanks learner(wanting to be a master).
Hi guys,
Does atoi work like this: it scans an array element by element 0=49 1=50 2=51 converts these ascii values 49 50 and 51 into there digit equivalents and add each one to an identifier/varriable.
Thanks learner(wanting to be a master).
No. It doesn't.
x = atoi( "32" );
printf("%d", x ); /* this prints 32 */
atoi( ) takes a string of numbers and translatest it directly into the integer value of the string, as shown above.
Quzah.
Okay, let's say this is the program...The 0 is very important, as atoi is meant for reading a 0 terminated character string. That is to say, if instead I used a[3] = {49, 50, 51}, then atoi(a) would have just kept reading for integer values in the memory past a[3] because it hadn't yet encounted the string terminator... '\0'.Code:#include <stdlib.h> main () { char a[4]; int i; a = {49, 50, 51, 0}; // 49 = '1', 50 = '2', 51 = '3', 0 = '\0' // So a is the string "123" i = atoi (a) // Now i is the integer value 123 return; }
a = {49, .....}???Originally posted by QuestionC
Okay, let's say this is the program...The 0 is very important, as atoi is meant for reading a 0 terminated character string. That is to say, if instead I used a[3] = {49, 50, 51}, then atoi(a) would have just kept reading for integer values in the memory past a[3] because it hadn't yet encounted the string terminator... '\0'.Code:#include <stdlib.h> main () { char a[4]; int i; a = {49, 50, 51, 0}; // 49 = '1', 50 = '2', 51 = '3', 0 = '\0' // So a is the string "123" i = atoi (a) // Now i is the integer value 123 return; }
you try to compile this?
probably not!
any way this is not the meaning of atoi(ascii to integer),
void main(void)
{
char *a;
a = "49";
printf("%d",atoi(a));
}
output:
49 press any key to continue...
Sorry, my post was intended to just get the spirit of atoi across as code, not as a program. Here's the code, fixed up to compile, and producting some output.Looking at your code... well, here's the thing...Code:#include <stdlib.h> main () { char a[4] = {49, 50, 51, 0}; int i; printf ("a represented as a string is... %s\n", a); printf ("a represented as an int is... %d\n", a); // 49 = '1', 50 = '2', 51 = '3', 0 = '\0' // So a is the string "123" i = atoi (a); printf ("atoi(a) as an int is... %d\n", i); printf ("atoi(a) as a string is... %s\n", i); // Now i is the integer value 123 return; }is equivalent (kinda) toCode:char *a = "49";and that's pretty much the difference between my code and yours. 52 is the ASCII value for '4', 57 is the ASCII value for '9', and 0 is the string terminator. SimilarlyCode:a[3] = {52, 57, 0};is the same asCode:char a[4] = {49, 50, 51, 0};Code:char * a = "123"
*Note to self... use atoi and pointer arithmatic to perform divisions in next ofuscated code contest*
> return;
Just to nit pick...you forgot to return a value!
Quzah.