C++ :: Program To Convert Int To Char Array Without Symbol
Apr 17, 2014
I'm writting program and need to convert int ot char array without simbol. I have tryed snprintf , but his returns array full of simbols if it is initilized elsware return full of garbidge. Is there any elegent way to aceave this? What I'm trying to aceave is liek this:
char buffer[10];
int temp = 1231423;
// Do conversation...
// After conversation char array should look like this
// 1 2 3 1 4 2 3 _ _ _
// without simbol
How to convert char array into double?,i.e. store char array values into a single double variable. Below is the code that i'm working. Im extracting the value "2255.1682" from char array gpsdata1. I used while loop, extracted the value and stored in "myChar", but i want to store it in double variable "lat1".
How do I convert a string of unknown length to a char array? I am reading strings from a file and checking if the string is a Palindrome or not. I think my palindrome function is correct, but do I do something like char [] array = string.length(); ??
the real char got 1000 digits this is just example how do i convert chars from numbers[4] to numbers[15] and save them as one number ? in this case i will get int x = 5444546546545643 as u can see char numbers as a example above
I am writing code to multiply two int arrays and in my one function i am trying to convert the char array into an int array. I have tested many parts however i can not find the problem.
Code:
struct integer* convert_integer(char* stringInt){ struct integer *converted = malloc(sizeof(struct integer)); int length, i, *ints; ints = (int *)malloc(10001 * sizeof(int)); length = strlen(stringInt); printf("stringInt: %s with length of %d ", stringInt, length); converted->size = length;
I have a file which contains a year and the name of an associated file to be read. I need to extract the data in the txt file and perform some calculations.
( year data file) 2004 2004data.txt 2005 2005data.txt 2006 2006data.txt
Here is what I do. I first declare "char yeardata" and then pass "2004data.txt" to it. Then I call yeardata in ifstream to extract the data inside the file "2004data.txt". The problem is that char yeardata is not constant so I cannot pass the file to it. It doesn't work if I change "char yeardata" to "const char yeardata".
Code: int oldnewcomp_temp(char* lcfile) { using namespace std;
Set found to false. Set position to -1. Set index to 0. While found is false and index < number of elements If list[index] is equal to search value found = true. position = index. End If Add 1 to index. End While. Return position
When I try to compile a program from a C book I am following I am getting these errors, I have looked for ways to resolve it but I wasn't able to.
Errors:
Error3error LNK2001: unresolved external symbol _druk_instructiesC:UsersIvoDocumentsVisual Studio 2012ProjectsConsoleApplication2ConsoleApplication2Handspel.objConsoleApplication2 Error4error LNK2001: unresolved external symbol _speler_keuzeC:UsersIvoDocumentsVisual Studio 2012ProjectsConsoleApplication2ConsoleApplication2Handspel.objConsoleApplication2 Error5error LNK2001: unresolved external symbol _machine_keuzeC:UsersIvoDocumentsVisual Studio
if we have int x = 5; and we want to convert x which is == 5 to char so for example char number = x doesnot work i understand why , but how to convert it ?
I am trying to convert a char to a CString, I have tried to use the CString.Format method but didn't work. I have a char(char holder[10]) and I want to see if holder is a certain string, say for instance SeaLevel. Below is the code that I also tried.
This sends the buffer to a LIN modem. My question is: can this be done better. If I have a astring of hex numbers like "09 98 88 55 42 FF 00 00 FF BD 89". How could I send this without manually makng a char with hex numbers?
when I was looking for a way how to convert char into numeric value for std::cout I found some old discussion with this statement: Operations on unsigned int are typically faster than on unsigned char, because your processor cannot fetch single bytes but has to get at least a multiple of 4 and mask out the other 3 bytes. Is this true? By using smaller (in bytes) variable I actually slow down my program? I always thought that it is a good practice if I use the smallest variable which will do the work. Is it also dependent on a compiler and OS?
I want to avoid converting the char[] into a string as an intermediate step, since I'm trying to write some "string" parser helpers which don't allocate a bunch of different strings onto the heap. (whole point of this little project is to reduce GC pressure in applications that do alot of string parsing).
basically if I have a char[] that contains {'1','2','3'}, I'd want to to be converted into 123.
I tried messing around with the stackalloc operator in C#, but its illegal to stackalloc a string unfortunately. I also googled around for converting a char[] into a numeric value, but all the solutions convert each individual char into their ASCII code, or convert the char[] into a string as an intermediate step.