I have run into some code and was wondering what the original developer was up to. Below is a simplified program using this pattern:
#include <stdio.h>
int main() {
char title[80] = "mytitle";
char title2[80] = "mayataiatale";
char mystring[80];
/* hugh ? */
sscanf(title,"%[^a]",mystring);
printf("%s\n",mystring); /* Output is "mytitle" */
/* hugh ? */
sscanf(title2,"%[^a]",mystring); /* Output is "m" */
printf("%s\n",mystring);
return 0;
}
The man page for scanf has relevant information, but I'm having trouble reading it. What is the purpose of using this sort of notation? What is it trying to accomplish?
The main reason for the character classes is so that the %s notation stops at the first white space character, even if you specify field lengths, and you quite often don't want it to. In that case, the character class notation can be extremely helpful.
Consider this code to read a line of up to 10 characters, discarding any excess, but keeping spaces:
#include <ctype.h>
#include <stdio.h>
int main(void)
{
char buffer[10+1] = "";
int rc;
while ((rc = scanf("%10[^\n]%*[^\n]", buffer)) >= 0)
{
int c = getchar();
printf("rc = %d\n", rc);
if (rc >= 0)
printf("buffer = <<%s>>\n", buffer);
buffer[0] = '\0';
}
printf("rc = %d\n", rc);
return(0);
}
This was actually example code for a discussion on comp.lang.c.moderated (circa June 2004) related to getline() variants.
At least some confusion reigns. The first format specifier, %10[^\n], reads up to 10 non-newline characters and they are assigned to buffer, along with a trailing null. The second format specifier, %*[^\n] contains the assignment suppression character (*) and reads zero or more remaining non-newline characters from the input. When the scanf() function completes, the input is pointing at the next newline character. The body of the loop reads and prints that character, so that when the loop restarts, the input is looking at the start of the next line. The process then repeats. If the line is shorter than 10 characters, then those characters are copied to buffer, and the 'zero or more non-newlines' format processes zero non-newlines.
The constructs like %[a] and %[^a] exist so that scanf() can be used as a kind of lexical analyzer. These are sort of like %s, but instead of collecting a span of as many "stringy" characters as possible, they collect just a span of characters as described by the character class. There might be cases where writing %[a-zA-Z0-9] might make sense, but I'm not sure I see a compelling use case for complementary classes with scanf().
IMHO, scanf() is simply not the right tool for this job. Every time I've set out to use one of its more powerful features, I've ended up eventually ripping it out and implementing the capability in a different way. In some cases that meant using lex to write a real lexical analyzer, but usually doing line at a time I/O and breaking it coarsely into tokens with strtok() before doing value conversion was sufficient.
Edit: I ended ripping out scanf() typically because when faced with users insisting on providing incorrect input, it just isn't good at helping the program give good feedback about the problem, and having an assembler print "Error, terminated." as its sole helpful error message was not going over well with my user. (Me, in that case.)
It's like character sets from regular expressions; [0-9] matches a string of digits, [^aeiou] matches anything that isn't a lowercase vowel, etc.
There are all sorts of uses, such as pulling out numbers, identifiers, chunks of whitespace, etc.
You can read about it in the ISO/IEC9899 standard available online.
Here is a paragraph I quote from the document about [ (Page 286):
Matches a nonempty sequence of characters from a set of expected
characters.
The conversion specifier includes all subsequent characters in the
format string, up to and including the matching right bracket (]). The
characters between the brackets (the scanlist) compose the scanset,
unless the character after the left bracket is a circumflex (^), in
which case the scanset contains all characters that do not appear in
the scanlist between the circumflex and the right bracket. If the
conversion specifier begins with [] or [^], the right bracket
character is in the scanlist and the next following right bracket
character is the matching right bracket that ends the specification;
otherwise the first following right bracket character is the one that
ends the specification. If a - character is in the scanlist and is not
the first, nor the second where the first character is a ^, nor the
last character, the behavior is implementation-defined.
Related
I have the following problem:
sscanf is not returning the way I want it to.
This is the sscanf:
sscanf(naru,
"%s[^;]%s[^;]%s[^;]%s[^;]%f[^';']%f[^';']%[^;]%[^;]%[^;]%[^;]"
"%[^;]%[^;]%[^;]%[^;]%[^;]%[^;]%[^;]%[^;]%[^;]%[^;]%[^;]%[^;]"
"%[^;]%[^;]%[^;]%[^;]%[^;]%[^;]",
&jokeri, &paiva1, &keskilampo1, &minlampo1, &maxlampo1,
&paiva2, &keskilampo2, &minlampo2, &maxlampo2, &paiva3,
&keskilampo3, &minlampo3, &maxlampo3, &paiva4, &keskilampo4,
&minlampo4, &maxlampo4, &paiva5, &keskilampo5, &minlampo5,
&maxlampo5, &paiva6, &keskilampo6, &minlampo6, &maxlampo6,
&paiva7, &keskilampo7, &minlampo7, &maxlampo7);
The string it's scanning:
const char *str = "city;"
"2014-04-14;7.61;4.76;7.61;"
"2014-04-15;5.7;5.26;6.63;"
"2014-04-16;4.84;2.49;5.26;"
"2014-04-17;2.13;1.22;3.45;"
"2014-04-18;3;2.15;3.01;"
"2014-04-19;7.28;3.82;7.28;"
"2014-04-20;10.62;5.5;10.62;";
All of the variables are stored as char paiva1[22] etc; however, the sscanf isn't storing anything except the city correctly. I've been trying to stop each variable at ;.
Any help how to get it to store the dates etc correctly would be appreciated.
Or if there's a smarter way to do this, I'm open to suggestions.
There are multiple problems, but BLUEPIXY hit the first one — the scan-set notation doesn't follow %s.
Your first line of the format is:
"%s[^;]%s[^;]%s[^;]%s[^;]%f[^';']%f[^';']%[^;]%[^;]%[^;]%[^;]"
As it stands, it looks for a space separated word, followed by a [, a ^, a ;, and a ] (which is self-contradictory; the character after the string is a space or end of string).
The first fixup would be to use scan-sets properly:
"%[^;]%[^;]%[^;]%[^;]%f[^';']%f[^';']%[^;]%[^;]%[^;]%[^;]"
Now you have a problem that the first %[^;] scans everything up to the end of string or first semicolon, leaving nothing for the second %[;] to match.
"%[^;]; %[^;]; %[^;]; %[^;]; %f[^';']%f[^';']%[^;]%[^;]%[^;]%[^;]"
This looks for a string up to a semicolon, then for the semicolon, then optional white space, then repeats for three items. Apart from adding a length to limit the size of string, preventing overflow, these are fine. The %f is OK. The following material looks for an odd sequence of characters again.
However, when the data is looked at, it seems to consist of a city, and then seven sets of 'a date plus three numbers'.
You'd do better with an array of structures (if you've worked with those yet), or a set of 4 parallel arrays, and a loop:
char jokeri[30];
char paiva[7][30];
float keskilampo[7];
float minlampo[7];
float maxlampo[7];
int eoc; // End of conversion
int offset = 0;
char sep;
if (fscanf(str + offset, "%29[^;]%c%n", jokeri, &sep, &eoc) != 2 || sep != ';')
...report error...
offset += eoc;
for (int i = 0; i < 7; i++)
{
if (fscanf(str + offset, "%29[^;];%f;%f;%f%c%n", paiva[i],
&keskilampo[i], &minlampo[i], &maxlampo[i], &sep, &eoc) != 5 ||
sep != ';')
...report error...
offset += eoc;
}
See also How to use sscanf() in loops.
Now you have data that can be managed. The set of 29 separately named variables is a ghastly thought; the code using them will be horrid.
Note that the scan-set conversion specifications limit the string to a maximum length one shorter than the size of jokeri and the paiva array elements.
You might legitimately be wondering about why the code uses %c%n and &sep before &eoc. There is a reason, but it is subtle. Suppose that the sscanf() format string is:
"%29[^;];%f;%f;%f;%n"
Further, suppose there's a problem in the data that the semicolon after the third number is missing. The call to sscanf() will report that it made 4 successful conversions, but it doesn't count the %n as an assignment, so you can't tell that sscanf() didn't find a semicolon and therefore did not set &eoc at all; the value is left over from a previous call to sscanf(), or simply uninitialized. By using the %c to scan a value into sep, we get 5 returned on success, and we can be sure the %n was successful too. The code checks that the value in sep is in fact a semicolon and not something else.
You might want to consider a space before the semi-colons, and before the %c. They'll allow some other data strings to be converted that would not be matched otherwise. Spaces in a format string (outside a scan-set) indicate where optional white space may appear.
I would use strtok function to break your string into pieces using ; as a delimiter. Such a long format string may be a source of problems in future.
I'm trying to read a string which consists of a set of numbers followed by a string, wrapped with some other basic text.
In other words, the format of the line is something like this:
Stuff<5,10,-5,8,"Test string here.">
Naively, I tried:
sscanf(str,"Stuff<%d,%d,%d,%d,\"%s\">",&i1,&i2,&i3,&i4,str2);
But after some research I discovered %s is supposed to stop parsing when it gets to a whitespace character. I found this question, but none of the answers addresses the problem I have: the string could contain any character in it, including newline characters and properly escaped quotes. The latter is not a problem, if I can just get sscanf to put everything after the first quote in the pre-allocated buffer I provide, I can strip the end off myself.
But how do I do this? I can't use %[] because it requires something in it to terminate the string, and the only thing I want to terminate it is the null terminator. So I thought, "Hey, I'll just use the null terminator!" But %[\0] made the compiler grumpy:
warning: no closing ‘]’ for ‘%[’ format
warning: embedded ‘\0’ in format
warning: no closing ‘]’ for ‘%[’ format
warning: embedded ‘\0’ in format
Using something like %*c won't work either, because I don't know exactly how many characters need to be taken. I tried passing strlen(str) since it will be less than that, but sscanf returns 4 and nothing is put into str2, suggesting that perhaps because the length was too long it gave up and didn't bother.
Update: I guess I could do something like:
sscanf(str,"Stuff<%d,%d,%d,%d,\"%n",&i1,&i2,&i3,&i4,&n);
str2 = str+n;
Your update seems to be a good answer. I was going to suggest strchr to find the location of the first quote char, after using sscanf to get i1 thru i4. Side note, you should always check the return value from sscanf to make sure that the conversions worked. This is even more important with your suggested answer, since n will be left uninitialized if the first four conversions aren't successful.
Scan for '\"', then for everything not '\"', then '\"' again.
Be sure to check sscanf() result and limit how long the test string may be.
char test_string[100];
int n = 0;
if (sscanf(str, "Stuff<%d,%d,%d,%d, \"%99[^\"]\"> %n",
&i1, &i2, &i3, &i4, test_string, &n) == 5 && str[n] == '\0') Good();
Your attempt using "...%[\0]...", from sscanf() point-of-view, is "...%[".
Everything in the format from "\0" on is ignored.
Using the int n = 0, appending " %n" to the format string, appending &n to the parameters and checking str[n] == '\0' is a neat trick with sscanf() to insure the entire line parsed correctly. Note: "%n" does not add to sscanf() result.
This is not the only way to achieve what you want to achieve, but probably the neatest way to do it: You'll need to use the scansets. I won't tell you the solution directly with this answer, I'll explain how to use scansets as far as I know them, and you'll hopefully be able to do it yourself.
Scansets %[...] are like %s when it comes to assignment, they interpret values as characters and store them into character arrays. %s is whitespace-terminated, %[...] is the flexible version of that.
There are two ways of using the scanset, first one being without a preceding caret ^, second one being with a preceding caret ^.
When you use scanset without the preceding caret ^, the characters you put inside the brackets will be the only ones that will be read, stored and then left behind. As soon as scanf encounters a non-matching character, that %[...] will be over. For example:
// input: asdasdasdwasdasd
char s[100] = { 0 };
scanf( "%[das]", s );
printf( "%s", s );
// output: asdasdasd
When you use scanset with the preceding caret ^, the search is inversed. It reads, stores and leaves behind every character until it reaches any one of the characters that you've put down after the preceding caret ^. Example:
// input: abcdefgh^kekQ
char s[100] = { 0 };
scanf( "%[^Q^]", s );
printf( "%s", s );
// output: abcdefgh
Beware, remaining characters is still to be read inside the stream, the file pointer won't get beyond the character which caused termination. I.e. for the first one, getchar( ); would give a 'w', and for the second one it would give a '^'.
I hope this will be enough. If you still cannot find your way out, ask away, I can give you a solution.
I have read strings with spaces in them using the following scanf() statement.
scanf("%[^\n]", &stringVariableName);
What is the meaning of the control string [^\n]?
Is is okay way to read strings with white space like this?
This mean "read anything until you find a '\n'"
This is OK, but would be better to do this "read anything until you find a '\n', or read more characters than my buffer support"
char stringVariableName[256] = {}
if (scanf("%255[^\n]", stringVariableName) == 1)
...
Edit: removed & from the argument, and check the result of scanf.
The format specifier "%[^\n]" instructs scanf() to read up to but not including the newline character. From the linked reference page:
matches a non-empty sequence of character from set of characters.
If the first character of the set is ^, then all characters not
in the set are matched. If the set begins with ] or ^] then the ]
character is also included into the set.
If the string is on a single line, fgets() is an alternative but the newline must be removed as fgets() writes it to the output buffer. fgets() also forces the programmer to specify the maximum number of characters that can be read into the buffer, making it less likely for a buffer overrun to occur:
char buffer[1024];
if (fgets(buffer, 1024, stdin))
{
/* Remove newline. */
char* nl = strrchr(buffer, '\n');
if (nl) *nl = '\0';
}
It is possible to specify the maximum number of characters to read via scanf():
scanf("%1023[^\n]", buffer);
but it is impossible to forget to do it for fgets() as the compiler will complain. Though, of course, the programmer could specify the wrong size but at least they are forced to consider it.
Technically, this can't be well defined.
Matches a nonempty sequence of characters from a set of expected
characters (the scanset).
If no l length modifier is present, the corresponding argument shall
be a pointer to the initial element of a character array large enough
to accept the sequence and a terminating null character, which will be
added automatically.
Supposing the declaration of stringVariableName looks like char stringVariableName[x];, then &stringVariableName is a char (*)[x];, not a char *. The type is wrong. The behaviour is undefined. It might work by coincidence, but anything that relies on coincidence doesn't work by my definition.
The only way to form a char * using &stringVariableName is if stringVariableName is a char! This implies that the character array is only large enough to accept a terminating null character. In the event where the user enters one or more characters before pressing enter, scanf would be writing beyond the end of the character array and invoking undefined behaviour. In the event where the user merely presses enter, the %[...] directive will fail and not even a '\0' will be written to your character array.
Now, with that all said and done, I'll assume you meant this: scanf("%[^\n]", stringVariableName); (note the omitted ampersand)
You really should be checking the return value!!
A %[ directive causes scanf to retrieve a sequence of characters consisting of those specified between the [ square brackets ]. A ^ at the beginning of the set indicates that the desired set contains all characters except for those between the brackets. Hence, %[^\n] tells scanf to read as many non-'\n' characters as it can, and store them into the array pointed to by the corresponding char *.
The '\n' will be left unread. This could cause problems. An empty field will result in a match failure. In this situation, it's possible that no data will be copied into your array (not even a terminating '\0' character). For this reason (and others), you really need to check the return value!
Which manual contains information about the return values of scanf? The scanf manual.
Other people have explained what %[^\n] means.
This is not an okay way to read strings. It is just as dangerous as the notoriously unsafe gets, and for the same reason: it has no idea how big the buffer at stringVariableName is.
The best way to read one full line from a file is getline, but not all C libraries have it. If you don't, you should use fgets, which knows how big the buffer is, and be aware that you might not get a complete line (if the line is too long for the buffer).
Reading from the man pages for scanf()...
[ Matches a non-empty sequence of characters from the
specified set of accepted characters; the next pointer must be a
pointer to char, and there must be enough room for all the characters
in the string, plus a terminating null byte. The usual skip of
leading white space is suppressed. The string is to be made up of
characters in (or not in) a particular set; the set is defined by the
characters between the open bracket [ character and a close bracket ]
character. The set excludes those characters if the first character
after the open bracket is a circumflex (^). To include a close
bracket in the set, make it the first character after the open bracket
or the circumflex; any other position will end the set. The hyphen
character - is also special; when placed between two other
characters, it adds all intervening characters to the set. To
include a hyphen, make it the last character before the final close
bracket. For instance, [^]0-9-] means the set "everything except
close bracket, zero through nine, and hyphen". The string ends with
the appearance of a character not in the (or, with a
circumflex, in) set or when the field width runs out.
In a nutshell, the [^\n] means that read everything from the string that is not a \n and store that in the matching pointer in the argument list.
The language I am using is C
I am trying to scan data from a file, and the code segment is like:
char lsm;
long unsigned int address;
int objsize;
while(fscanf(mem_trace,"%c %lx,%d\n",&lsm,&address,&objsize)!=EOF){
printf("%c %lx %d\n",lsm,address,objsize);
}
The file which I read from has the first line as follows:
S 00600aa0,1
I 004005b6,5
I 004005bb,5
I 004005c0,5
S 7ff000398,8
The results that show in stdout is:
8048350 134524916
S 600aa0 1
I 4005b6 5
I 4005bb 5
I 4005c0 5
S 7ff000398,8
Obviously, the results had an extra line which comes nowhere.Is there anybody know how this could happen?
Thx!
This works for me on the data you supply:
#include <stdio.h>
int main(void)
{
char lsm[2];
long unsigned int address;
int objsize;
while (scanf("%1s %lx,%d\n", lsm, &address, &objsize) == 3)
printf("%s %9lx %d\n", lsm, address, objsize);
return 0;
}
There are multiple changes. The simplest and least consequential is the change from fscanf() to scanf(); that's for my convenience.
One important change is the type of lsm from a single char to an array of two characters. The format string then uses %1s reads one character (plus NUL '\0') into the string, but it also (and this is crucial) skips leading blanks.
Another change is the use of == 3 instead of != EOF in the condition. If something goes wrong, scanf() returns the number of successful matches. Suppose that it managed to read a letter but what followed was not a hex number; it would return 1 (not EOF). Further, it would return 1 on each iteration until it could find something that matched a hex number. Always test for the number of values you expect.
The output format was tidied up with the %9lx. I was testing on a 64-bit system, so the 9-digit hex converts fine. One problem with scanf() is that if you get an overflow on a conversion, the behaviour is undefined.
Output:
S 600aa0 1
I 4005b6 5
I 4005bb 5
I 4005c0 5
S 7ff000398 8
Why did you get the results you got?
The first conversion read a space into lsm, but then failed to convert S into a hex number, so it was left behind for the next cycle. So, you got the left-over garbage printed in the address and object size columns. The second iteration read the S and was then in synchrony with the data until the last line. The newline at the end of the format (like any other white space in the format string) eats white space, which is why the last line worked despite the leading blank.
A directive that is a conversion specification defines a set of
matching input sequences, as described below for each specifier. A
conversion specification is executed in the following steps:
Input white-space characters (as specified by the isspace function)
are skipped, unless the specification includes a [, c, or n specifier.
An input item is read from the stream, unless the specification
includes an n specifier.
[...]
The first time you call fscanf, your %c reads the first blank space in the file. Your white-space character reads zero or more characters of white-space, this time zero of them. Your %lx fails to match the S character in the file, so fscanf returns. You don't check the result. Your variables contain values that they had from earlier operations.
The second time you call fscanf, your %c reads the first S character in the file. From that point on, everything else succeeds too.
Added in editing, here is the simplest change to your format string to solve your problem:
" %c %lx,%d\n"
The space at the beginning will read zero or more characters of white-space and then %c will read the first non-white-space character in the file.
Here is another format string that will also solve your problem:
" %c %lx,%d"
The reason is that if you read and discard zero or more white-space characters twice in a row, the result is the same as doing it just once.
I think that fsanf reads the first character [space] into lsm then fails to read address and objsize because the format shift doesn't match for the rest of the line.
Then it prints a space then whatever happened to be in address and objsize when it was declared
EDIT--
fscanf consumes the whitespaces after each call, if you call ftell you'll see
printf("%c %lx %d %d\n",lsm,address,objsize,ftell(mem_trace));
I have run into some code and was wondering what the original developer was up to. Below is a simplified program using this pattern:
#include <stdio.h>
int main() {
char title[80] = "mytitle";
char title2[80] = "mayataiatale";
char mystring[80];
/* hugh ? */
sscanf(title,"%[^a]",mystring);
printf("%s\n",mystring); /* Output is "mytitle" */
/* hugh ? */
sscanf(title2,"%[^a]",mystring); /* Output is "m" */
printf("%s\n",mystring);
return 0;
}
The man page for scanf has relevant information, but I'm having trouble reading it. What is the purpose of using this sort of notation? What is it trying to accomplish?
The main reason for the character classes is so that the %s notation stops at the first white space character, even if you specify field lengths, and you quite often don't want it to. In that case, the character class notation can be extremely helpful.
Consider this code to read a line of up to 10 characters, discarding any excess, but keeping spaces:
#include <ctype.h>
#include <stdio.h>
int main(void)
{
char buffer[10+1] = "";
int rc;
while ((rc = scanf("%10[^\n]%*[^\n]", buffer)) >= 0)
{
int c = getchar();
printf("rc = %d\n", rc);
if (rc >= 0)
printf("buffer = <<%s>>\n", buffer);
buffer[0] = '\0';
}
printf("rc = %d\n", rc);
return(0);
}
This was actually example code for a discussion on comp.lang.c.moderated (circa June 2004) related to getline() variants.
At least some confusion reigns. The first format specifier, %10[^\n], reads up to 10 non-newline characters and they are assigned to buffer, along with a trailing null. The second format specifier, %*[^\n] contains the assignment suppression character (*) and reads zero or more remaining non-newline characters from the input. When the scanf() function completes, the input is pointing at the next newline character. The body of the loop reads and prints that character, so that when the loop restarts, the input is looking at the start of the next line. The process then repeats. If the line is shorter than 10 characters, then those characters are copied to buffer, and the 'zero or more non-newlines' format processes zero non-newlines.
The constructs like %[a] and %[^a] exist so that scanf() can be used as a kind of lexical analyzer. These are sort of like %s, but instead of collecting a span of as many "stringy" characters as possible, they collect just a span of characters as described by the character class. There might be cases where writing %[a-zA-Z0-9] might make sense, but I'm not sure I see a compelling use case for complementary classes with scanf().
IMHO, scanf() is simply not the right tool for this job. Every time I've set out to use one of its more powerful features, I've ended up eventually ripping it out and implementing the capability in a different way. In some cases that meant using lex to write a real lexical analyzer, but usually doing line at a time I/O and breaking it coarsely into tokens with strtok() before doing value conversion was sufficient.
Edit: I ended ripping out scanf() typically because when faced with users insisting on providing incorrect input, it just isn't good at helping the program give good feedback about the problem, and having an assembler print "Error, terminated." as its sole helpful error message was not going over well with my user. (Me, in that case.)
It's like character sets from regular expressions; [0-9] matches a string of digits, [^aeiou] matches anything that isn't a lowercase vowel, etc.
There are all sorts of uses, such as pulling out numbers, identifiers, chunks of whitespace, etc.
You can read about it in the ISO/IEC9899 standard available online.
Here is a paragraph I quote from the document about [ (Page 286):
Matches a nonempty sequence of characters from a set of expected
characters.
The conversion specifier includes all subsequent characters in the
format string, up to and including the matching right bracket (]). The
characters between the brackets (the scanlist) compose the scanset,
unless the character after the left bracket is a circumflex (^), in
which case the scanset contains all characters that do not appear in
the scanlist between the circumflex and the right bracket. If the
conversion specifier begins with [] or [^], the right bracket
character is in the scanlist and the next following right bracket
character is the matching right bracket that ends the specification;
otherwise the first following right bracket character is the one that
ends the specification. If a - character is in the scanlist and is not
the first, nor the second where the first character is a ^, nor the
last character, the behavior is implementation-defined.