I am currently working on writing a word search program. However, I am stuck on reading the used input into the 2-D array. The code I've posted below is only dealing with the user input (I'll work on the word search part once I know i am correctly reading in the user input). I know the coding is bad practice with the use of hexadecimal, and getchar() ect. But I am currently using a microblaze microprocessor and this is just the way microblaze can interpret the information. As for the infinite while loops...that can be changed just trying to figure out how.
My question is how could I change my code to correctly read in the user input into the 2-D array?
Code: #include "platform.h"#include "xparameters.h" #include <stdlib.h> #include <stdio.h> #define MAX 20 int main() { char grid[MAX][MAX], word[30]; int i, j, arr[2],num;
So the plan is to create a word search by reading in characters from a file into an array. This is my code so far, nowhere near finished but have encountered a problem already:
My question is to do with the section highlighted in red... I can't really see why it is not printing out my array (wordsearch), it's probably very basic but I have no C experience so am not too confident in what I'm doing.
i'm making a program for basic data entry.i have also included search feature which uses strcmpi() function.if i have a file name'report on tigers' and someone searched for 'tigers' then that person will not find the required file.any way i can overcome that ?
I am writing a program that determines how many times a word is repeated in a file without a main function. I almost have it correct but it doesn't exit after it finds how many of the last word and it just loops.
Here is my coding
int count_the_word(string filename, string word) { ifstream word_search; int number_the = 0 int number_is = 0 int number_of_romeos = 0 int number_case = 0 string user_input;
[Code] ....
there is also two more lines from a different txt file i just havn't coded them yet.
the main function that is used to test it is as follows cout << count_the_word("raj.txt", "the") << endl; cout << count_the_word("raj.txt", "is") << endl; cout << count_the_word("raj.txt", "Romeo") << endl; cout << count_the_word("raj.txt", "case") << endl;
it works like its supposed to but like i earlier mentioned it outputs another number after it finds how many "case" are in the file and then it loops asking for a filename.
Been trying for a while now to complete a physics degree first year computing task I've been assigned, which is to create a wordsearch solver to read to an array a wordsearch from a .txt file and find words in all directions (x+,x-y+ etc.).
I have a feeling the program is almost complete, but will stop looking for the word once the first character of the word has already come up. For example, if I'm searching for computer, and a c exists in an array element before it, the program will stop searching. I have included my code and the wordsearch file beneath.
Code:
#include <stdio.h>#include <stdlib.h> #include <math.h> #include <string.h> #include <ctype.h> //Used for the'toupper' functio int main() }
I have done an exercise from "Thinking in C++" to print text from a file to the console one line at a time, with the user pressing enter to get the next line.
My original code is below, how could I change it for one word at a time?
I tried to alter my program to print one word at a time by changing "getline(in, word)" to "in >> word", but it prints each new word on a new line, the only input I have found to make the next word appear is Enter, I assume that's why.
Is there a way to make it print one word at a time when the user says, but on the same line?
i've been trying to figure out to search for a word in a text file and then display everything in the same row as the word found int ie this is whats in the file
john doe 3/21/1920 tech support review team 45,000
so user wants to find tech..and everything associated with it.
so program search for tech, when it does it then display the whole row.
john doe 3/21/1920 tech support review team 45,000
I can figure out how to search for a word, but no clue how to get it to then print out the row. This is all I can figure out to do.
ifstream FileSearch; FileSearch.open("employee"); if(FileSearch.is_open()) {string letters;// search word would be store here string row; ??stores entire row as string while(1)
I have a text file where in each line is 3 words and 2 int type numbers. I'm doing search by word and I want to print out to the screen the whole line where that word was found (the words is repeated in some lines). My search looks like this:
Code: #include<iostream> #include<string> #include<fstream> #include<stdlib.h> #include <vector> using namespace std; int main(){ vector <string> words; string str, paieska;
I made my own function to search if two given strings in my function are equal but the problem is if i pass two variable like hello,hello ... result is string equal but if i pass hello , hello also give me string equal because last 4 characters same to last 4 characters of hello ...
Code: int getSimilarityOfTwoStrings(const char str1[],const char str2[]){ int str1Len = getStringLength(str1); int str2Len = getStringLength(str2); int i = 0; int j = 0; bool truefalse;
I need to develop a simple program, i have 2 variables (begin, end), and i need to search in a file, And extract the string between the Begin and the End variables to a new File, For Example:
my text file: file.txt:
some text here<StartHere>more text here</EndHere>text text
//And now, search in the Text file, And Extract the text between the begin string and the End string. <...>
The Result should be: NewFile.txt with the content:
<StartHere>more text here</EndHere>
That's it!, Here is what i have for now:
#include "stdafx.h" #include <iostream> #include <fstream> #include <vector> using namespace std; int main() { int ocurrences_count = 0; int ocurrences2_count = 0; char word[20]; //this array will save user input
I'm trying to calculate a series of times from start to end, and find out the duration between them, sum them up and see if they're above a certain value or not, for each particular instance.
My goal is to provide a prepared text file with time tags such as this:
And the program is able to calculate the total time relevant to each instance (instances separated by a line of '=').
Some form of number should somehow identify each instance or something similar and a text file is generated with total time printed for each instance. E.g.
Now I'm currently working on making the logic to calculate time within the ranges I'd like based on several parameters.
Are there any references I can use when it comes to working with strings in order to seek and extract these values in order to work with them? The documentation available on this website, despite being very informative, does not show practical applications of said class and I'm at a loss on how to implement the functionality.
I have a set of projects. Each one builds either a static library or an executable. What I'd like to do, is at build time I want to embed a version string representing the version of the executable as well as the version of each library. These version strings will come from an external source (in my case it's based on a "git describe" call, but that's beside the point). Embedding such strings can be highly valuable for traceability. (Versions of 3rd-party libraries are not necessary.)
I'm using qmake as my build system, but this should work more or less similarly with any build tool. What I'd ideally like to do is define this process in such a self-contained way that a an absolutely minimal amount of additional code is required in order to leverage it. Preferably, nothing more than an include(version.pri) in each project's .pro file in order to collect the versions. (Retrieving them later, such as to respond to a --version command-line flag, can be done via traditional C++ methods.)
What I've done so far is to define a singleton VersionTracker class, and then tweak the build system so that "MODULE" and "VERSION" are preprocessor symbols defined at build time. I've also tweaked the build system so that a file in each project, version.cpp, is rebuilt (and regenerated if necessary) on every build regardless of changes. This source file can capture the information in the preprocessor symbols into each static library and the executable.
Now, here's the problem. How can I get the information from those version.cpp files into the VersionTracker class? I thought I could use a global object's constructor to do it, but it turns out the symbols are stripped out when the static libraries are linked so I only get the executable's version. I also found a page on stackoverflow detailing a very clever way to call a registration function at class definition time, but again the class definition appears to be stripped out if it's defined in the version.cpp file of a static library and not referenced elsewhere.
Everything I've read basically says you either need to use linker flags to prevent symbol stripping entirely, which is probably an adoption-killer for this hack, or you need to use an explicit registration function called from the executable. I'd prefer to avoid this since it is just another thing a programmer could forget to update when a library dependency is added or removed.
My last idea, which I haven't tried yet, would be to put each version.cpp into a separate static library from the one it is describing. This version-only library could be linked without symbol stripping. I don't love this concept but it might work.
I haven't yet figured out how shared libraries can be worked into this framework at all. I'll worry about that after I get static libraries working.
inputting a search array. I tried putting a binary search but I can't get it to work. everything else works up until I put the value I am searching for in the array, then it just crashes.
How it suppose to work: input 2 coordinates with a value each then it calculates the distance between them then it suppose to let user search the coordinates for a value and state if found which coordinate it is at.
Basically I have a text file called words. I'm supposed to extract a word randomly form the file and have the user guess the word. If they guess the word correctly in x number of tries they will receive the definition.
I'm having trouble receiving that random word and I'm getting the definitions from the file.
This is what is in the words.txt file apple#the usually round, red or yellow, edible fruit of a small tree boat#a vessel for transport by water horse#a solid-hoofed plant-eating domesticated mammal with a flowing mane and tail, used for riding television#a system for transmitting visual images and sound that are reproduced on screens soup#a liquid dish, typically made by boiling meat, fish, or vegetables, etc. bottle#a container, typically made of glass or plastic and with a narrow neck barber#a person who cuts hair toast#sliced bread browned on both sides by exposure to radiant heat radar#a system for detecting the presence, direction, distance, and speed of aircraft, ships, and other objects red#of a color at the end of the spectrum next to orange and opposite violet
I am building a linked list and i need to display function i have. The display function displays all the letters of the word entered instead of the word itself. below is my struct, one of my functions and the display function.
I'm learning programming, and C++. I've got a question, but I couldn't solve my problem so far. I need to use arrays and only basic stuff to solve this:
Create a program that reads a word from the user and then print (cout) this word on contrary. It's simple, I know, but I can't do it,. I've tried some stuff but I don't get how I will get the proper values to do this. All I know is that I can use variable.lenght().
I've taken part the text into 1 word per line, but I can't figure out how to printf every word only once and then add (%d) in the end to show how many repetitions of that word there are.
Code: #include <iostream> #include <stdio.h> #include <stdlib.h> #include <string.h> using namespace std; int main(){ char *oneword;
I'm writing a function that accepts a char array containing the title of a book as parameter, the following then has to take place:
1.) Extra white spaces between words need to be removed [DONE]
2.) Text has to be converted to title case, i.e each new word has to start with a capital letter [DONE]
3.) Lastly I have I text file (minors.txt) containing a number of words that should not be capitalized by the function, like "a" and "an", however I don't know how to implement this.
Example of end product:
ENTER THE TITLE OF THE BOOK: a brief hisTOry OF everyTHING
Correct Output:
bool Book :: convertToTitleCase(char* inTitle) { int length = strlen(inTitle); bool thisWordCapped = false; //Convert paramater to lower case and //Remove multiple white spaces for (int x = 0; x < length; x++)
[Code]...
I was thinking of maby reading the words in the text file into a string array, and then comparing the two arrays to ensure that when a word is present in a text file, the word is not capitalized, however I don't know if that is possible between a string array and a char array.