Example if user enters:
My name is James.
Using scanf, I have to print the full line, i.e. My name is James.
, then I have to get t
@Splat has the best answer here, since this is homework and part of your assignment is to use scanf
. However, fgets
is much easier to use and offers finer control.
As to your second question, you get the length of a string with strlen
, and you store it in a variable of type size_t
. Storing it in an int
is wrong, because we don't expect to have strings of -5 length. Likewise, storing it in an unsigned int
or other unsigned type is inappropriate because we don't know exactly how big an integral type is, nor exactly how much room we need to store the size. The size_t
type exists as a type that is guaranteed to be the right size for your system.
Try:
scanf("%80[^\r\n]", string);
Replace 80 with 1 less that the size of your array. Check out the scanf man page for more information
#include "stdio.h"
#include "conio.h"
void main()
{
char str[20];
int i;
clrscr();
printf("Enter your string");
scanf("%[^\t\n]s",str); --scanf to accept multi-word string
i = strlen(str); -- variable i to store length of entered string
printf("%s %d",str,i); -- display the entered string and length of string
getch();
}
output :
enter your string : My name is james
display output : My name is james 16
#include "stdio.h"
int main()
{
char str[20];
int i,t;
scanf("%d",&t);
while(t--){
fflush(stdin);
scanf(" %[^\t\n]s",str);// --scanf to accept multi-word string
i = strlen(str);// -- variable i to store length of entered string
printf("%s %d\n",str,i);// -- display the entered string and length of string
}
return 0;
}