How to replace whitespaces and tabs with nothing in C? - c

I wrote this function:
void r_tabs_spaces(char *input) {
int i;
for (i = 0; i < strlen(input); i++)
{
if (input[i] == ' ' || input[i] == '\t')
input[i] = '';
}
}
However when I compile this and run it, the compiler complains that "error: empty character constant" at line where I try to input[i] = '';
How can I do this in C then?

In C, a string is an array of bytes. You can't assign an "empty byte", but you have to shift the remainder of the bytes forward.
Here's one way of how to do that:
char *write = str, *read = str;
do {
// Skip space and tab
if (*read != ' ' && *read != '\t')
*(write++) = *read;
} while (*(read++));
Remember that literal strings in C are usually in write-protected memory, so you have to copy to the heap before you can change them. For example, this usually segfaults:
char *str = "hello world!"; // Literal string
str[0] = 'H'; // Segfault
You can copy a string to the heap with strdup (among others):
char *str = strdup("hello world!"); // Copy string to heap
str[0] = 'H'; // Works
EDIT: Per your comment, you can skip only initial whitespace by remembering the fact that you've seen a non-whitespace character. For example:
char *write = str, *read = str;
do {
// Skip space and tab if we haven't copied anything yet
if (write != str || (*read != ' ' && *read != '\t')) {
*(write++) = *read;
}
} while (*(read++));

If you have a pointer to the string
" string with leading spaces"
^ pointer
just move it ...
" string with leading spaces"
^ pointer
for example:
#include <ctype.h>
/* ... */
char mystring[] = " string with leading spaces";
char *pointer = mystring;
while (*pointer && isspace((unsigned char)*pointer)) ++pointer;
/* pointer now points to a (possibly empty) string with no leading spaces */

The way to remove a character of a string is to move the rest of the string one character back.

Use
foo += strspn(foo, " \t");
to move the pointer foo to the first character which is not a space or tab.
To actually remove the characters from a dynamically allocated string, use
size_t offset = strspn(foo, " \t");
size_t size = strlen(foo + offset) + 1;
foo = realloc(memmove(foo, foo + offset, size), size);

Related

Deleting extra spaces in a string - C [duplicate]

Is there a clean, preferably standard method of trimming leading and trailing whitespace from a string in C? I'd roll my own, but I would think this is a common problem with an equally common solution.
If you can modify the string:
// Note: This function returns a pointer to a substring of the original string.
// If the given string was allocated dynamically, the caller must not overwrite
// that pointer with the returned value, since the original pointer must be
// deallocated using the same allocator with which it was allocated. The return
// value must NOT be deallocated using free() etc.
char *trimwhitespace(char *str)
{
char *end;
// Trim leading space
while(isspace((unsigned char)*str)) str++;
if(*str == 0) // All spaces?
return str;
// Trim trailing space
end = str + strlen(str) - 1;
while(end > str && isspace((unsigned char)*end)) end--;
// Write new null terminator character
end[1] = '\0';
return str;
}
If you can't modify the string, then you can use basically the same method:
// Stores the trimmed input string into the given output buffer, which must be
// large enough to store the result. If it is too small, the output is
// truncated.
size_t trimwhitespace(char *out, size_t len, const char *str)
{
if(len == 0)
return 0;
const char *end;
size_t out_size;
// Trim leading space
while(isspace((unsigned char)*str)) str++;
if(*str == 0) // All spaces?
{
*out = 0;
return 1;
}
// Trim trailing space
end = str + strlen(str) - 1;
while(end > str && isspace((unsigned char)*end)) end--;
end++;
// Set output size to minimum of trimmed string length and buffer size minus 1
out_size = (end - str) < len-1 ? (end - str) : len-1;
// Copy trimmed string and add null terminator
memcpy(out, str, out_size);
out[out_size] = 0;
return out_size;
}
Here's one that shifts the string into the first position of your buffer. You might want this behavior so that if you dynamically allocated the string, you can still free it on the same pointer that trim() returns:
char *trim(char *str)
{
size_t len = 0;
char *frontp = str;
char *endp = NULL;
if( str == NULL ) { return NULL; }
if( str[0] == '\0' ) { return str; }
len = strlen(str);
endp = str + len;
/* Move the front and back pointers to address the first non-whitespace
* characters from each end.
*/
while( isspace((unsigned char) *frontp) ) { ++frontp; }
if( endp != frontp )
{
while( isspace((unsigned char) *(--endp)) && endp != frontp ) {}
}
if( frontp != str && endp == frontp )
*str = '\0';
else if( str + len - 1 != endp )
*(endp + 1) = '\0';
/* Shift the string so that it starts at str so that if it's dynamically
* allocated, we can still free it on the returned pointer. Note the reuse
* of endp to mean the front of the string buffer now.
*/
endp = str;
if( frontp != str )
{
while( *frontp ) { *endp++ = *frontp++; }
*endp = '\0';
}
return str;
}
Test for correctness:
#include <stdio.h>
#include <string.h>
#include <ctype.h>
/* Paste function from above here. */
int main()
{
/* The test prints the following:
[nothing to trim] -> [nothing to trim]
[ trim the front] -> [trim the front]
[trim the back ] -> [trim the back]
[ trim front and back ] -> [trim front and back]
[ trim one char front and back ] -> [trim one char front and back]
[ trim one char front] -> [trim one char front]
[trim one char back ] -> [trim one char back]
[ ] -> []
[ ] -> []
[a] -> [a]
[] -> []
*/
char *sample_strings[] =
{
"nothing to trim",
" trim the front",
"trim the back ",
" trim front and back ",
" trim one char front and back ",
" trim one char front",
"trim one char back ",
" ",
" ",
"a",
"",
NULL
};
char test_buffer[64];
char comparison_buffer[64];
size_t index, compare_pos;
for( index = 0; sample_strings[index] != NULL; ++index )
{
// Fill buffer with known value to verify we do not write past the end of the string.
memset( test_buffer, 0xCC, sizeof(test_buffer) );
strcpy( test_buffer, sample_strings[index] );
memcpy( comparison_buffer, test_buffer, sizeof(comparison_buffer));
printf("[%s] -> [%s]\n", sample_strings[index],
trim(test_buffer));
for( compare_pos = strlen(comparison_buffer);
compare_pos < sizeof(comparison_buffer);
++compare_pos )
{
if( test_buffer[compare_pos] != comparison_buffer[compare_pos] )
{
printf("Unexpected change to buffer # index %u: %02x (expected %02x)\n",
compare_pos, (unsigned char) test_buffer[compare_pos], (unsigned char) comparison_buffer[compare_pos]);
}
}
}
return 0;
}
Source file was trim.c. Compiled with 'cc -Wall trim.c -o trim'.
My solution. String must be changeable. The advantage above some of the other solutions that it moves the non-space part to the beginning so you can keep using the old pointer, in case you have to free() it later.
void trim(char * s) {
char * p = s;
int l = strlen(p);
while(isspace(p[l - 1])) p[--l] = 0;
while(* p && isspace(* p)) ++p, --l;
memmove(s, p, l + 1);
}
This version creates a copy of the string with strndup() instead of editing it in place. strndup() requires _GNU_SOURCE, so maybe you need to make your own strndup() with malloc() and strncpy().
char * trim(char * s) {
int l = strlen(s);
while(isspace(s[l - 1])) --l;
while(* s && isspace(* s)) ++s, --l;
return strndup(s, l);
}
Here's my C mini library for trimming left, right, both, all, in place and separate, and trimming a set of specified characters (or white space by default).
contents of strlib.h:
#ifndef STRLIB_H_
#define STRLIB_H_ 1
enum strtrim_mode_t {
STRLIB_MODE_ALL = 0,
STRLIB_MODE_RIGHT = 0x01,
STRLIB_MODE_LEFT = 0x02,
STRLIB_MODE_BOTH = 0x03
};
char *strcpytrim(char *d, // destination
char *s, // source
int mode,
char *delim
);
char *strtriml(char *d, char *s);
char *strtrimr(char *d, char *s);
char *strtrim(char *d, char *s);
char *strkill(char *d, char *s);
char *triml(char *s);
char *trimr(char *s);
char *trim(char *s);
char *kill(char *s);
#endif
contents of strlib.c:
#include <strlib.h>
char *strcpytrim(char *d, // destination
char *s, // source
int mode,
char *delim
) {
char *o = d; // save orig
char *e = 0; // end space ptr.
char dtab[256] = {0};
if (!s || !d) return 0;
if (!delim) delim = " \t\n\f";
while (*delim)
dtab[*delim++] = 1;
while ( (*d = *s++) != 0 ) {
if (!dtab[0xFF & (unsigned int)*d]) { // Not a match char
e = 0; // Reset end pointer
} else {
if (!e) e = d; // Found first match.
if ( mode == STRLIB_MODE_ALL || ((mode != STRLIB_MODE_RIGHT) && (d == o)) )
continue;
}
d++;
}
if (mode != STRLIB_MODE_LEFT && e) { // for everything but trim_left, delete trailing matches.
*e = 0;
}
return o;
}
// perhaps these could be inlined in strlib.h
char *strtriml(char *d, char *s) { return strcpytrim(d, s, STRLIB_MODE_LEFT, 0); }
char *strtrimr(char *d, char *s) { return strcpytrim(d, s, STRLIB_MODE_RIGHT, 0); }
char *strtrim(char *d, char *s) { return strcpytrim(d, s, STRLIB_MODE_BOTH, 0); }
char *strkill(char *d, char *s) { return strcpytrim(d, s, STRLIB_MODE_ALL, 0); }
char *triml(char *s) { return strcpytrim(s, s, STRLIB_MODE_LEFT, 0); }
char *trimr(char *s) { return strcpytrim(s, s, STRLIB_MODE_RIGHT, 0); }
char *trim(char *s) { return strcpytrim(s, s, STRLIB_MODE_BOTH, 0); }
char *kill(char *s) { return strcpytrim(s, s, STRLIB_MODE_ALL, 0); }
The one main routine does it all.
It trims in place if src == dst, otherwise,
it works like the strcpy routines.
It trims a set of characters specified in the string delim, or white space if null.
It trims left, right, both, and all (like tr).
There is not much to it, and it iterates over the string only once. Some folks might complain that trim right starts on the left, however, no strlen is needed which starts on the left anyway. (One way or another you have to get to the end of the string for right trims, so you might as well do the work as you go.) There may be arguments to be made about pipelining and cache sizes and such -- who knows. Since the solution works from left to right and iterates only once, it can be expanded to work on streams as well. Limitations: it does not work on unicode strings.
Here is my attempt at a simple, yet correct in-place trim function.
void trim(char *str)
{
int i;
int begin = 0;
int end = strlen(str) - 1;
while (isspace((unsigned char) str[begin]))
begin++;
while ((end >= begin) && isspace((unsigned char) str[end]))
end--;
// Shift all characters back to the start of the string array.
for (i = begin; i <= end; i++)
str[i - begin] = str[i];
str[i - begin] = '\0'; // Null terminate string.
}
Late to the trim party
Features:
1. Trim the beginning quickly, as in a number of other answers.
2. After going to the end, trimming the right with only 1 test per loop. Like #jfm3, but works for an all white-space string)
3. To avoid undefined behavior when char is a signed char, cast *s to unsigned char.
Character handling "In all cases the argument is an int, the value of which shall be representable as an unsigned char or shall equal the value of the macro EOF. If the argument has any other value, the behavior is undefined." C11 §7.4 1
#include <ctype.h>
// Return a pointer to the trimmed string
char *string_trim_inplace(char *s) {
while (isspace((unsigned char) *s)) s++;
if (*s) {
char *p = s;
while (*p) p++;
while (isspace((unsigned char) *(--p)));
p[1] = '\0';
}
// If desired, shift the trimmed string
return s;
}
#chqrlie commented the above does not shift the trimmed string. To do so....
// Return a pointer to the (shifted) trimmed string
char *string_trim_inplace(char *s) {
char *original = s;
size_t len = 0;
while (isspace((unsigned char) *s)) {
s++;
}
if (*s) {
char *p = s;
while (*p) p++;
while (isspace((unsigned char) *(--p)));
p[1] = '\0';
// len = (size_t) (p - s); // older errant code
len = (size_t) (p - s + 1); // Thanks to #theriver
}
return (s == original) ? s : memmove(original, s, len + 1);
}
Here's a solution similar to #adam-rosenfields in-place modification routine but without needlessly resorting to strlen(). Like #jkramer, the string is left-adjusted within the buffer so you can free the same pointer. Not optimal for large strings since it does not use memmove. Includes the ++/-- operators that #jfm3 mentions. FCTX-based unit tests included.
#include <ctype.h>
void trim(char * const a)
{
char *p = a, *q = a;
while (isspace(*q)) ++q;
while (*q) *p++ = *q++;
*p = '\0';
while (p > a && isspace(*--p)) *p = '\0';
}
/* See http://fctx.wildbearsoftware.com/ */
#include "fct.h"
FCT_BGN()
{
FCT_QTEST_BGN(trim)
{
{ char s[] = ""; trim(s); fct_chk_eq_str("", s); } // Trivial
{ char s[] = " "; trim(s); fct_chk_eq_str("", s); } // Trivial
{ char s[] = "\t"; trim(s); fct_chk_eq_str("", s); } // Trivial
{ char s[] = "a"; trim(s); fct_chk_eq_str("a", s); } // NOP
{ char s[] = "abc"; trim(s); fct_chk_eq_str("abc", s); } // NOP
{ char s[] = " a"; trim(s); fct_chk_eq_str("a", s); } // Leading
{ char s[] = " a c"; trim(s); fct_chk_eq_str("a c", s); } // Leading
{ char s[] = "a "; trim(s); fct_chk_eq_str("a", s); } // Trailing
{ char s[] = "a c "; trim(s); fct_chk_eq_str("a c", s); } // Trailing
{ char s[] = " a "; trim(s); fct_chk_eq_str("a", s); } // Both
{ char s[] = " a c "; trim(s); fct_chk_eq_str("a c", s); } // Both
// Villemoes pointed out an edge case that corrupted memory. Thank you.
// http://stackoverflow.com/questions/122616/#comment23332594_4505533
{
char s[] = "a "; // Buffer with whitespace before s + 2
trim(s + 2); // Trim " " containing only whitespace
fct_chk_eq_str("", s + 2); // Ensure correct result from the trim
fct_chk_eq_str("a ", s); // Ensure preceding buffer not mutated
}
// doukremt suggested I investigate this test case but
// did not indicate the specific behavior that was objectionable.
// http://stackoverflow.com/posts/comments/33571430
{
char s[] = " foobar"; // Shifted across whitespace
trim(s); // Trim
fct_chk_eq_str("foobar", s); // Leading string is correct
// Here is what the algorithm produces:
char r[16] = { 'f', 'o', 'o', 'b', 'a', 'r', '\0', ' ',
' ', 'f', 'o', 'o', 'b', 'a', 'r', '\0'};
fct_chk_eq_int(0, memcmp(s, r, sizeof(s)));
}
}
FCT_QTEST_END();
}
FCT_END();
I'm not sure what you consider "painless."
C strings are pretty painful. We can find the first non-whitespace character position trivially:
while (isspace(* p)) p++;
We can find the last non-whitespace character position with two similar trivial moves:
while (* q) q++;
do { q--; } while (isspace(* q));
(I have spared you the pain of using the * and ++ operators at the same time.)
The question now is what do you do with this? The datatype at hand isn't really a big robust abstract String that is easy to think about, but instead really barely any more than an array of storage bytes. Lacking a robust data type, it is impossible to write a function that will do the same as PHperytonby's chomp function. What would such a function in C return?
Another one, with one line doing the real job:
#include <stdio.h>
int main()
{
const char *target = " haha ";
char buf[256];
sscanf(target, "%s", buf); // Trimming on both sides occurs here
printf("<%s>\n", buf);
}
If you're using glib, then you can use g_strstrip
I didn't like most of these answers because they did one or more of the following...
Returned a different pointer inside the original pointer's string (kind of a pain to juggle two different pointers to the same thing).
Made gratuitous use of things like strlen() that pre-iterate the entire string.
Used non-portable OS-specific lib functions.
Backscanned.
Used comparison to ' ' instead of isspace() so that TAB / CR / LF are preserved.
Wasted memory with large static buffers.
Wasted cycles with high-cost functions like sscanf/sprintf.
Here is my version:
void fnStrTrimInPlace(char *szWrite) {
const char *szWriteOrig = szWrite;
char *szLastSpace = szWrite, *szRead = szWrite;
int bNotSpace;
// SHIFT STRING, STARTING AT FIRST NON-SPACE CHAR, LEFTMOST
while( *szRead != '\0' ) {
bNotSpace = !isspace((unsigned char)(*szRead));
if( (szWrite != szWriteOrig) || bNotSpace ) {
*szWrite = *szRead;
szWrite++;
// TRACK POINTER TO LAST NON-SPACE
if( bNotSpace )
szLastSpace = szWrite;
}
szRead++;
}
// TERMINATE AFTER LAST NON-SPACE (OR BEGINNING IF THERE WAS NO NON-SPACE)
*szLastSpace = '\0';
}
Use a string library, for instance:
Ustr *s1 = USTR1(\7, " 12345 ");
ustr_sc_trim_cstr(&s1, " ");
assert(ustr_cmp_cstr_eq(s1, "12345"));
...as you say this is a "common" problem, yes you need to include a #include or so and it's not included in libc but don't go inventing your own hack job storing random pointers and size_t's that way only leads to buffer overflows.
A bit late to the game, but I'll throw my routines into the fray. They're probably not the most absolute efficient, but I believe they're correct and they're simple (with rtrim() pushing the complexity envelope):
#include <ctype.h>
#include <string.h>
/*
Public domain implementations of in-place string trim functions
Michael Burr
michael.burr#nth-element.com
2010
*/
char* ltrim(char* s)
{
char* newstart = s;
while (isspace( *newstart)) {
++newstart;
}
// newstart points to first non-whitespace char (which might be '\0')
memmove( s, newstart, strlen( newstart) + 1); // don't forget to move the '\0' terminator
return s;
}
char* rtrim( char* s)
{
char* end = s + strlen( s);
// find the last non-whitespace character
while ((end != s) && isspace( *(end-1))) {
--end;
}
// at this point either (end == s) and s is either empty or all whitespace
// so it needs to be made empty, or
// end points just past the last non-whitespace character (it might point
// at the '\0' terminator, in which case there's no problem writing
// another there).
*end = '\0';
return s;
}
char* trim( char* s)
{
return rtrim( ltrim( s));
}
Very late to the party...
Single-pass forward-scanning solution with no backtracking. Every character in the source string is tested exactly once twice. (So it should be faster than most of the other solutions here, especially if the source string has a lot of trailing spaces.)
This includes two solutions, one to copy and trim a source string into another destination string, and the other to trim the source string in place. Both functions use the same code.
The (modifiable) string is moved in-place, so the original pointer to it remains unchanged.
#include <stddef.h>
#include <ctype.h>
char * trim2(char *d, const char *s)
{
// Sanity checks
if (s == NULL || d == NULL)
return NULL;
// Skip leading spaces
const unsigned char * p = (const unsigned char *)s;
while (isspace(*p))
p++;
// Copy the string
unsigned char * dst = (unsigned char *)d; // d and s can be the same
unsigned char * end = dst;
while (*p != '\0')
{
if (!isspace(*dst++ = *p++))
end = dst;
}
// Truncate trailing spaces
*end = '\0';
return d;
}
char * trim(char *s)
{
return trim2(s, s);
}
Just to keep this growing, one more option with a modifiable string:
void trimString(char *string)
{
size_t i = 0, j = strlen(string);
while (j > 0 && isspace((unsigned char)string[j - 1])) string[--j] = '\0';
while (isspace((unsigned char)string[i])) i++;
if (i > 0) memmove(string, string + i, j - i + 1);
}
I know there have many answers, but I post my answer here to see if my solution is good enough.
// Trims leading whitespace chars in left `str`, then copy at almost `n - 1` chars
// into the `out` buffer in which copying might stop when the first '\0' occurs,
// and finally append '\0' to the position of the last non-trailing whitespace char.
// Reture the length the trimed string which '\0' is not count in like strlen().
size_t trim(char *out, size_t n, const char *str)
{
// do nothing
if(n == 0) return 0;
// ptr stop at the first non-leading space char
while(isspace(*str)) str++;
if(*str == '\0') {
out[0] = '\0';
return 0;
}
size_t i = 0;
// copy char to out until '\0' or i == n - 1
for(i = 0; i < n - 1 && *str != '\0'; i++){
out[i] = *str++;
}
// deal with the trailing space
while(isspace(out[--i]));
out[++i] = '\0';
return i;
}
The easiest way to skip leading spaces in a string is, imho,
#include <stdio.h>
int main()
{
char *foo=" teststring ";
char *bar;
sscanf(foo,"%s",bar);
printf("String is >%s<\n",bar);
return 0;
}
Ok this is my take on the question. I believe it's the most concise solution that modifies the string in place (free will work) and avoids any UB. For small strings, it's probably faster than a solution involving memmove.
void stripWS_LT(char *str)
{
char *a = str, *b = str;
while (isspace((unsigned char)*a)) a++;
while (*b = *a++) b++;
while (b > str && isspace((unsigned char)*--b)) *b = 0;
}
#include <ctype.h>
#include <string.h>
char *trim_space(char *in)
{
char *out = NULL;
int len;
if (in) {
len = strlen(in);
while(len && isspace(in[len - 1])) --len;
while(len && *in && isspace(*in)) ++in, --len;
if (len) {
out = strndup(in, len);
}
}
return out;
}
isspace helps to trim all white spaces.
Run a first loop to check from last byte for space character and reduce the length variable
Run a second loop to check from first byte for space character and reduce the length variable and increment char pointer.
Finally if length variable is more than 0, then use strndup to create new string buffer by excluding spaces.
This one is short and simple, uses for-loops and doesn't overwrite the string boundaries.
You can replace the test with isspace() if needed.
void trim (char *s) // trim leading and trailing spaces+tabs
{
int i,j,k, len;
j=k=0;
len = strlen(s);
// find start of string
for (i=0; i<len; i++) if ((s[i]!=32) && (s[i]!=9)) { j=i; break; }
// find end of string+1
for (i=len-1; i>=j; i--) if ((s[i]!=32) && (s[i]!=9)) { k=i+1; break;}
if (k<=j) {s[0]=0; return;} // all whitespace (j==k==0)
len=k-j;
for (i=0; i<len; i++) s[i] = s[j++]; // shift result to start of string
s[i]=0; // end the string
}//_trim
If, and ONLY IF there's only one contiguous block of text between whitespace, you can use a single call to strtok(3), like so:
char *trimmed = strtok(input, "\r\t\n ");
This works for strings like the following:
" +1.123.456.7890 "
" 01-01-2020\n"
"\t2.523"
This will not work for strings that contain whitespace between blocks of non-whitespace, like " hi there ". It's probably better to avoid this approach, but now it's here in your toolbox if you need it.
Personally, I'd roll my own. You can use strtok, but you need to take care with doing so (particularly if you're removing leading characters) that you know what memory is what.
Getting rid of trailing spaces is easy, and pretty safe, as you can just put a 0 in over the top of the last space, counting back from the end. Getting rid of leading spaces means moving things around. If you want to do it in place (probably sensible) you can just keep shifting everything back one character until there's no leading space. Or, to be more efficient, you could find the index of the first non-space character, and shift everything back by that number. Or, you could just use a pointer to the first non-space character (but then you need to be careful in the same way as you do with strtok).
#include "stdafx.h"
#include "malloc.h"
#include "string.h"
int main(int argc, char* argv[])
{
char *ptr = (char*)malloc(sizeof(char)*30);
strcpy(ptr," Hel lo wo rl d G eo rocks!!! by shahil sucks b i g tim e");
int i = 0, j = 0;
while(ptr[j]!='\0')
{
if(ptr[j] == ' ' )
{
j++;
ptr[i] = ptr[j];
}
else
{
i++;
j++;
ptr[i] = ptr[j];
}
}
printf("\noutput-%s\n",ptr);
return 0;
}
Most of the answers so far do one of the following:
Backtrack at the end of the string (i.e. find the end of the string and then seek backwards until a non-space character is found,) or
Call strlen() first, making a second pass through the whole string.
This version makes only one pass and does not backtrack. Hence it may perform better than the others, though only if it is common to have hundreds of trailing spaces (which is not unusual when dealing with the output of a SQL query.)
static char const WHITESPACE[] = " \t\n\r";
static void get_trim_bounds(char const *s,
char const **firstWord,
char const **trailingSpace)
{
char const *lastWord;
*firstWord = lastWord = s + strspn(s, WHITESPACE);
do
{
*trailingSpace = lastWord + strcspn(lastWord, WHITESPACE);
lastWord = *trailingSpace + strspn(*trailingSpace, WHITESPACE);
}
while (*lastWord != '\0');
}
char *copy_trim(char const *s)
{
char const *firstWord, *trailingSpace;
char *result;
size_t newLength;
get_trim_bounds(s, &firstWord, &trailingSpace);
newLength = trailingSpace - firstWord;
result = malloc(newLength + 1);
memcpy(result, firstWord, newLength);
result[newLength] = '\0';
return result;
}
void inplace_trim(char *s)
{
char const *firstWord, *trailingSpace;
size_t newLength;
get_trim_bounds(s, &firstWord, &trailingSpace);
newLength = trailingSpace - firstWord;
memmove(s, firstWord, newLength);
s[newLength] = '\0';
}
This is the shortest possible implementation I can think of:
static const char *WhiteSpace=" \n\r\t";
char* trim(char *t)
{
char *e=t+(t!=NULL?strlen(t):0); // *e initially points to end of string
if (t==NULL) return;
do --e; while (strchr(WhiteSpace, *e) && e>=t); // Find last char that is not \r\n\t
*(++e)=0; // Null-terminate
e=t+strspn (t,WhiteSpace); // Find first char that is not \t
return e>t?memmove(t,e,strlen(e)+1):t; // memmove string contents and terminator
}
These functions will modify the original buffer, so if dynamically allocated, the original
pointer can be freed.
#include <string.h>
void rstrip(char *string)
{
int l;
if (!string)
return;
l = strlen(string) - 1;
while (isspace(string[l]) && l >= 0)
string[l--] = 0;
}
void lstrip(char *string)
{
int i, l;
if (!string)
return;
l = strlen(string);
while (isspace(string[(i = 0)]))
while(i++ < l)
string[i-1] = string[i];
}
void strip(char *string)
{
lstrip(string);
rstrip(string);
}
What do you think about using StrTrim function defined in header Shlwapi.h.? It is straight forward rather defining on your own.
Details can be found on:
http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/windows/desktop/bb773454(v=vs.85).aspx
If you have
char ausCaptain[]="GeorgeBailey ";
StrTrim(ausCaptain," ");
This will give ausCaptain as "GeorgeBailey" not "GeorgeBailey ".
To trim my strings from the both sides I use the oldie but the gooody ;)
It can trim anything with ascii less than a space, meaning that the control chars will be trimmed also !
char *trimAll(char *strData)
{
unsigned int L = strlen(strData);
if(L > 0){ L--; }else{ return strData; }
size_t S = 0, E = L;
while((!(strData[S] > ' ') || !(strData[E] > ' ')) && (S >= 0) && (S <= L) && (E >= 0) && (E <= L))
{
if(strData[S] <= ' '){ S++; }
if(strData[E] <= ' '){ E--; }
}
if(S == 0 && E == L){ return strData; } // Nothing to be done
if((S >= 0) && (S <= L) && (E >= 0) && (E <= L)){
L = E - S + 1;
memmove(strData,&strData[S],L); strData[L] = '\0';
}else{ strData[0] = '\0'; }
return strData;
}
I'm only including code because the code posted so far seems suboptimal (and I don't have the rep to comment yet.)
void inplace_trim(char* s)
{
int start, end = strlen(s);
for (start = 0; isspace(s[start]); ++start) {}
if (s[start]) {
while (end > 0 && isspace(s[end-1]))
--end;
memmove(s, &s[start], end - start);
}
s[end - start] = '\0';
}
char* copy_trim(const char* s)
{
int start, end;
for (start = 0; isspace(s[start]); ++start) {}
for (end = strlen(s); end > 0 && isspace(s[end-1]); --end) {}
return strndup(s + start, end - start);
}
strndup() is a GNU extension. If you don't have it or something equivalent, roll your own. For example:
r = strdup(s + start);
r[end-start] = '\0';
Here i use the dynamic memory allocation to trim the input string to the function trimStr. First, we find how many non-empty characters exist in the input string. Then, we allocate a character array with that size and taking care of the null terminated character. When we use this function, we need to free the memory inside of main function.
#include<stdio.h>
#include<stdlib.h>
char *trimStr(char *str){
char *tmp = str;
printf("input string %s\n",str);
int nc = 0;
while(*tmp!='\0'){
if (*tmp != ' '){
nc++;
}
tmp++;
}
printf("total nonempty characters are %d\n",nc);
char *trim = NULL;
trim = malloc(sizeof(char)*(nc+1));
if (trim == NULL) return NULL;
tmp = str;
int ne = 0;
while(*tmp!='\0'){
if (*tmp != ' '){
trim[ne] = *tmp;
ne++;
}
tmp++;
}
trim[nc] = '\0';
printf("trimmed string is %s\n",trim);
return trim;
}
int main(void){
char str[] = " s ta ck ove r fl o w ";
char *trim = trimStr(str);
if (trim != NULL )free(trim);
return 0;
}

Capitalize first letter of a word in a string in C

I have to capitalize the first letter of every word (words are separated by a space) into a given array of char. I wrote the code but I can't figure out why it's not working nor displaying anything in output.
Here's the code:
void LetterCapitalize(char *str) {
char *str2;
int i = 0;
str2[i] = toupper(str[0]);
i++;
while (str[i]) {
if (str[i] == ' ') {
str2[i] = str[i];
str2[i + 1] = toupper(str[i] + 1);
i += 2;
} else {
str2[i] = str[i];
i++;
}
}
printf ("%s", str2);
}
And here's the main:
int main(void) {
char stringa[16] = "some string here";
LetterCapitalize(stringa);
return 0;
}
There are multiple problems:
The string defined in main is not null terminated because the initializer has exactly 16 characters, the defined length of the array, so there is no space for the null terminator. It is safer to omit the array length and let the compiler compute it from the initializer, including the null terminator:
char stringa[] = "some string here"; // sizeof stringa == 17
str2 is uninitialized: storing characters to it has undefined behavior. You could instead either modify the argument string in place or allocate a copy and modify that.
the logic in LetterCapitalize is risky: you assume that words are separated by a single space and that the string does not end with a space.
the char argument to toupper() should be cast as (unsigned char) to avoid undefined behavior on negative char values on platforms where the type char is signed by default.
Here is a modified version:
#include <ctype.h>
#include <stdio.h>
char *LetterCapitalize(char *str) {
unsigned char c, last = ' ';
// uppercase characters that follow a space or at the start of the string
for (size_t i = 0; (c = str[i]) != '\0'; last = c, i++) {
if (last == ' ')
str[i] = toupper(c);
}
return str;
}
int main() {
char stringa[] = "some string here";
puts(LetterCapitalize(stringa));
return 0;
}
For starters this array
char stringa[16] = "some string here";
does not contain a string because it does not have a space to accommodate the terminating zero character '\0' of the string literal used as an initializer.
It would be better to declare it the following way without explicit specifying its size
char stringa[] = "some string here";
So this while loop
while (str[i])
can invoke undefined behavior.
Also you are using the uninitialized pointer str2.
char *str2;
//...
str2[i] = toupper (str[0]);
that again invokes undefined behavior.
Pay attention to that a passed string can contain more than one space between words and moreover can contain leading and trailing spaces. So this if statement also can invoke undefined behavior due to skipping the terminating zero character '\0' of the source string
if (str[i] == ' ')
{
str2[i] = str[i];
str2[i + 1] = toupper (str[i] + 1);
i += 2;
}
Hence your approach is in general wrong.
Such a function should return the modified source string.
Instead of the for loop it is better to use standard C functions strspn and strcspn.
Here is a demonstration program.
#include <string.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#include <ctype.h>
char * LetterCapitalize( char *s )
{
const char *delim = " \t";
for (char *p = s; *p; p += strcspn( p, delim ) )
{
p += strspn( p, delim );
if (*p) *p = toupper( ( unsigned char )*p );
}
return s;
}
int main( void )
{
char stringa[] = "some string here";
puts( stringa );
puts( LetterCapitalize( stringa ) );
}
The program output is
some string here
Some String Here

Unable to print string

How can we replace spaces in a string using pointers? I tried but unable to get it.
While replacing space with hyphen, the control is coming out of the loop without tracing further.
while (*str != '\0')
{
if (*str == ' ')
*str = '-';
str++;
}
print(str);
Pointers are special type of variables used to store address of other variables. when you changed value inside the str pointer with "str++", it then pointed to the next element and after the while loop str pointed to the last element of the string('\0'). So you must store the the address of the first character of the string to do something with it later.
int main() {
char *s = "abcde", *str =s; // s,str stores address of first character
while(*str!='\0'){
if(*str ==' ')
*str='-';
printf("%c", *str);
str= str+1; // str now points to the next character. But s remains unchanged
}
}
When you use pointers to do this and increment pointers then print(str) will show you end of str so \0.
You must store pointer to begin of str:
char* str = (char*) malloc(sizeof(char) * 255);
memcpy(str, "abc de", 255);
char* beginStr = str;
while(*str!='\0') {
if (*str == ' ') {
*str = '-';
}
str++;
}
printf("%s\n", beginStr);
free(beginStr);

How to declare a dynamic array of char in c

I'm trying to declare an array of char dynamically, what I need to do is adding the newest character to the string which works fine, the problem is that when I try to print it out, at the beginning of the string there are some unknown characters.
char add[2];
char str2[200];
char c;
int temp = -1;
int num = 0;
char *str3;
str3 = malloc( (size_t)count ); //str3 = malloc(sizeof(char)) not working
while((c= getch()) !='\r')
{
for (int i = 0;i<200;i++)
{
if (str2[i] =='\0')
{
num = i;
break;
}
}
//printf("Num: %d\n",num);
if ((temp == -32) || (temp == 0))
{
}
else
{
if(isalnum((char)c) == 0)
{
if((c == '\'') || (c == -118) || (c == -115) || (c == -107) || (c == -123) || (c == -105)|| (c == 32))
{
realloc(str3,sizeof(char)+2);
printf("true: %c\n",c);
//realloc(str2,sizeof(char)+1);
add[1] = '\0';
add[0] = c;
strcat(str3,add);
strcat(str2,add);
printf("%s\n",str2);
printf("%s\n",str3);
}
else if (c == 8)
{
printf("Deleting something...\n");
}
}
else
{
realloc(str3,sizeof(char)+2);
printf("true: %c\n",c);
//realloc(str2,sizeof(char)+1);
add[1] = '\0';
add[0] = c;
strcat(str3,add);
strcat(str2,add);
printf("%s\n",str2);
printf("%s\n",str3);
}
}
printf("ASCII Code: %d\n",c);
temp = c;
}
To get some memory to your string, you have to tell malloc how many bytes of memory you want. sizeof(char) returns 1, therefore, you'll only have 1 byte. In C, strings are terminated by the NULL byte (\0), and printf and others will print until they find that NULL terminator.
If you do something like this:
char *str = malloc(1);
*str = 'a';
printf("%s", str);
You will probably get a very strange output, since you have no NULL terminator.
When you use the unsigned x; str = malloc(x);, it's actually undefined how many bytes you have, since that x variable is not initialized.
Since your question is very unclear, what I can tell you (from what I think you're asking) is how to actually get space for a string of 63 characters plus the NULL terminating byte.
char *str = malloc(64);
strcpy(str, "Stack Overflow");
printf("%s", str);
That will do it.
Also note that the memory block returned by malloc will not be zeroed, therefore you can't possibly know what's in it (that could be the reason you're getting garbage when you're printing).
I recommend you read about memory allocation in a good C book or in Wikipedia...
After your edit and "MCVE"
I made some edits to what I think it is you want. The modifications are explained in the comments of the source. Let me know if you have any doubts.
#include <stdio.h> /* printf */
#include <stdlib.h> /* malloc, free, realloc */
#include <string.h> /* strcat */
#include <ctype.h> /* isalnum */
#include <conio.h> /* getch */
int main(void)
{
char add[2];
char str2[200];
char c;
int temp = -1;
int num = 0;
char *str3;
/* I just think 'count' is an int, since you didn't put it in the code,
* I also deduced that #count will be used as the length of #str3
*/
int count;
/* Here, count is not initialized, so you MUST initialize it in order
* to call malloc with it! Since it seems you want to add character by
* character using realloc, then we just malloc() 2 bytes - 1 for a
* character and one for the NULL terminator.
*/
count = 2;
str3 = malloc(count);
/* You will be using #strcat to append strings to #str3, so you need
* to put a NULL terminator in it, because strcat will look for that
* NULL byte to find where it should append
*/
*str3 = 0x0;
while((c = getch()) != '\r') {
for (int i = 0;i < 200; i++) {
if (str2[i] =='\0') {
num = i;
break;
}
}
if ((temp == -32) || (temp == 0)) {
/* empty */
} else {
if(isalnum((char)c) == 0)
{
if((c == '\'') || (c == -118) || (c == -115) || (c == -107) || (c == -123) || (c == -105)|| (c == 32))
{
/* this is not the optimal way of using realloc, because
* you should first check for errors, but will do for
* this example.
* You must assign the returned value of realloc to str3.
*
* Also, since #count contains the length
* of #str3, you need to increment it.
*/
str3 = realloc(str3, ++count);
printf("true: %c\n",c);
add[1] = '\0';
add[0] = c;
strcat(str3,add);
strcat(str2,add);
printf("str2: %s\n",str2);
printf("str3: %s\n",str3);
} else if (c == 8) {
printf("Deleting something...\n");
}
} else {
/* see notes above on realloc */
str3 = realloc(str3, ++count);
printf("true: %c\n",c);
add[1] = '\0';
add[0] = c;
strcat(str3,add);
strcat(str2,add);
printf("str2: %s\n",str2);
printf("str3: %s\n",str3);
}
}
printf("ASCII Code: %d\n",c);
temp = c;
}
return 0;
}
In the first two cases, you are only allocating enough space for a single char. If you attempt to write more than one to that block of memory, you'll write past the end of the memory that was allocated for you. Doing so invokes undefined behavior, which in this case manifests as printing strange characters.
In the third case, you allocate x bytes of memory, however x is uninitialized and has an indeterminate value. Reading an indeterminate value is also undefined behavior. In this case it happens to work because the indeterminate value happens to be a valid value and is large enough to hold the string you want, however you can't depend on that behavior.
You need to allocate a byte for every character that you'll need, plus 1 for the terminating null byte that ends a string in C.
Note that the first allocation, this one
str = malloc(sizeof(char));
is exactly equivalent to1
str = malloc(1);
so you don't have room except for one character which is a problem, because it only represents an empty string.
If you allocate this much space you will very likely access memory out of the allocated space, causing undefined and unpredictable behavior. You need to understand what a string in c is,
A string in c is a sequence of non-null characters followed by a null character, so for a string with N characters you need N + 1 array elements (for ascii this equals bytes)
According to that definition of string if you wanted to store the string "Hello" you would need at least the following code
char *str = malloc(6);
if (str != NULL) {
str[0] = 'H';
str[1] = 'e';
str[2] = 'l';
str[3] = 'l';
str[4] = 'o';
str[5] = '\0'; // Or equivalently str[5] = 0;
}
as you can see, the last character being '\0' or 0 — which is the same — is very important.
All the functions in the standard library of c which expect a string parameter expect that there is the null terminator. For instance strlen() will count characters until it reaches the '\0', if it's not there then you can't predict where it is going to stop counting, this causing undefined behavior.
1sizeof(char) is as defined by the c standard always equal to one.

How do I trim leading/trailing whitespace in a standard way?

Is there a clean, preferably standard method of trimming leading and trailing whitespace from a string in C? I'd roll my own, but I would think this is a common problem with an equally common solution.
If you can modify the string:
// Note: This function returns a pointer to a substring of the original string.
// If the given string was allocated dynamically, the caller must not overwrite
// that pointer with the returned value, since the original pointer must be
// deallocated using the same allocator with which it was allocated. The return
// value must NOT be deallocated using free() etc.
char *trimwhitespace(char *str)
{
char *end;
// Trim leading space
while(isspace((unsigned char)*str)) str++;
if(*str == 0) // All spaces?
return str;
// Trim trailing space
end = str + strlen(str) - 1;
while(end > str && isspace((unsigned char)*end)) end--;
// Write new null terminator character
end[1] = '\0';
return str;
}
If you can't modify the string, then you can use basically the same method:
// Stores the trimmed input string into the given output buffer, which must be
// large enough to store the result. If it is too small, the output is
// truncated.
size_t trimwhitespace(char *out, size_t len, const char *str)
{
if(len == 0)
return 0;
const char *end;
size_t out_size;
// Trim leading space
while(isspace((unsigned char)*str)) str++;
if(*str == 0) // All spaces?
{
*out = 0;
return 1;
}
// Trim trailing space
end = str + strlen(str) - 1;
while(end > str && isspace((unsigned char)*end)) end--;
end++;
// Set output size to minimum of trimmed string length and buffer size minus 1
out_size = (end - str) < len-1 ? (end - str) : len-1;
// Copy trimmed string and add null terminator
memcpy(out, str, out_size);
out[out_size] = 0;
return out_size;
}
Here's one that shifts the string into the first position of your buffer. You might want this behavior so that if you dynamically allocated the string, you can still free it on the same pointer that trim() returns:
char *trim(char *str)
{
size_t len = 0;
char *frontp = str;
char *endp = NULL;
if( str == NULL ) { return NULL; }
if( str[0] == '\0' ) { return str; }
len = strlen(str);
endp = str + len;
/* Move the front and back pointers to address the first non-whitespace
* characters from each end.
*/
while( isspace((unsigned char) *frontp) ) { ++frontp; }
if( endp != frontp )
{
while( isspace((unsigned char) *(--endp)) && endp != frontp ) {}
}
if( frontp != str && endp == frontp )
*str = '\0';
else if( str + len - 1 != endp )
*(endp + 1) = '\0';
/* Shift the string so that it starts at str so that if it's dynamically
* allocated, we can still free it on the returned pointer. Note the reuse
* of endp to mean the front of the string buffer now.
*/
endp = str;
if( frontp != str )
{
while( *frontp ) { *endp++ = *frontp++; }
*endp = '\0';
}
return str;
}
Test for correctness:
#include <stdio.h>
#include <string.h>
#include <ctype.h>
/* Paste function from above here. */
int main()
{
/* The test prints the following:
[nothing to trim] -> [nothing to trim]
[ trim the front] -> [trim the front]
[trim the back ] -> [trim the back]
[ trim front and back ] -> [trim front and back]
[ trim one char front and back ] -> [trim one char front and back]
[ trim one char front] -> [trim one char front]
[trim one char back ] -> [trim one char back]
[ ] -> []
[ ] -> []
[a] -> [a]
[] -> []
*/
char *sample_strings[] =
{
"nothing to trim",
" trim the front",
"trim the back ",
" trim front and back ",
" trim one char front and back ",
" trim one char front",
"trim one char back ",
" ",
" ",
"a",
"",
NULL
};
char test_buffer[64];
char comparison_buffer[64];
size_t index, compare_pos;
for( index = 0; sample_strings[index] != NULL; ++index )
{
// Fill buffer with known value to verify we do not write past the end of the string.
memset( test_buffer, 0xCC, sizeof(test_buffer) );
strcpy( test_buffer, sample_strings[index] );
memcpy( comparison_buffer, test_buffer, sizeof(comparison_buffer));
printf("[%s] -> [%s]\n", sample_strings[index],
trim(test_buffer));
for( compare_pos = strlen(comparison_buffer);
compare_pos < sizeof(comparison_buffer);
++compare_pos )
{
if( test_buffer[compare_pos] != comparison_buffer[compare_pos] )
{
printf("Unexpected change to buffer # index %u: %02x (expected %02x)\n",
compare_pos, (unsigned char) test_buffer[compare_pos], (unsigned char) comparison_buffer[compare_pos]);
}
}
}
return 0;
}
Source file was trim.c. Compiled with 'cc -Wall trim.c -o trim'.
My solution. String must be changeable. The advantage above some of the other solutions that it moves the non-space part to the beginning so you can keep using the old pointer, in case you have to free() it later.
void trim(char * s) {
char * p = s;
int l = strlen(p);
while(isspace(p[l - 1])) p[--l] = 0;
while(* p && isspace(* p)) ++p, --l;
memmove(s, p, l + 1);
}
This version creates a copy of the string with strndup() instead of editing it in place. strndup() requires _GNU_SOURCE, so maybe you need to make your own strndup() with malloc() and strncpy().
char * trim(char * s) {
int l = strlen(s);
while(isspace(s[l - 1])) --l;
while(* s && isspace(* s)) ++s, --l;
return strndup(s, l);
}
Here's my C mini library for trimming left, right, both, all, in place and separate, and trimming a set of specified characters (or white space by default).
contents of strlib.h:
#ifndef STRLIB_H_
#define STRLIB_H_ 1
enum strtrim_mode_t {
STRLIB_MODE_ALL = 0,
STRLIB_MODE_RIGHT = 0x01,
STRLIB_MODE_LEFT = 0x02,
STRLIB_MODE_BOTH = 0x03
};
char *strcpytrim(char *d, // destination
char *s, // source
int mode,
char *delim
);
char *strtriml(char *d, char *s);
char *strtrimr(char *d, char *s);
char *strtrim(char *d, char *s);
char *strkill(char *d, char *s);
char *triml(char *s);
char *trimr(char *s);
char *trim(char *s);
char *kill(char *s);
#endif
contents of strlib.c:
#include <strlib.h>
char *strcpytrim(char *d, // destination
char *s, // source
int mode,
char *delim
) {
char *o = d; // save orig
char *e = 0; // end space ptr.
char dtab[256] = {0};
if (!s || !d) return 0;
if (!delim) delim = " \t\n\f";
while (*delim)
dtab[*delim++] = 1;
while ( (*d = *s++) != 0 ) {
if (!dtab[0xFF & (unsigned int)*d]) { // Not a match char
e = 0; // Reset end pointer
} else {
if (!e) e = d; // Found first match.
if ( mode == STRLIB_MODE_ALL || ((mode != STRLIB_MODE_RIGHT) && (d == o)) )
continue;
}
d++;
}
if (mode != STRLIB_MODE_LEFT && e) { // for everything but trim_left, delete trailing matches.
*e = 0;
}
return o;
}
// perhaps these could be inlined in strlib.h
char *strtriml(char *d, char *s) { return strcpytrim(d, s, STRLIB_MODE_LEFT, 0); }
char *strtrimr(char *d, char *s) { return strcpytrim(d, s, STRLIB_MODE_RIGHT, 0); }
char *strtrim(char *d, char *s) { return strcpytrim(d, s, STRLIB_MODE_BOTH, 0); }
char *strkill(char *d, char *s) { return strcpytrim(d, s, STRLIB_MODE_ALL, 0); }
char *triml(char *s) { return strcpytrim(s, s, STRLIB_MODE_LEFT, 0); }
char *trimr(char *s) { return strcpytrim(s, s, STRLIB_MODE_RIGHT, 0); }
char *trim(char *s) { return strcpytrim(s, s, STRLIB_MODE_BOTH, 0); }
char *kill(char *s) { return strcpytrim(s, s, STRLIB_MODE_ALL, 0); }
The one main routine does it all.
It trims in place if src == dst, otherwise,
it works like the strcpy routines.
It trims a set of characters specified in the string delim, or white space if null.
It trims left, right, both, and all (like tr).
There is not much to it, and it iterates over the string only once. Some folks might complain that trim right starts on the left, however, no strlen is needed which starts on the left anyway. (One way or another you have to get to the end of the string for right trims, so you might as well do the work as you go.) There may be arguments to be made about pipelining and cache sizes and such -- who knows. Since the solution works from left to right and iterates only once, it can be expanded to work on streams as well. Limitations: it does not work on unicode strings.
Here is my attempt at a simple, yet correct in-place trim function.
void trim(char *str)
{
int i;
int begin = 0;
int end = strlen(str) - 1;
while (isspace((unsigned char) str[begin]))
begin++;
while ((end >= begin) && isspace((unsigned char) str[end]))
end--;
// Shift all characters back to the start of the string array.
for (i = begin; i <= end; i++)
str[i - begin] = str[i];
str[i - begin] = '\0'; // Null terminate string.
}
Late to the trim party
Features:
1. Trim the beginning quickly, as in a number of other answers.
2. After going to the end, trimming the right with only 1 test per loop. Like #jfm3, but works for an all white-space string)
3. To avoid undefined behavior when char is a signed char, cast *s to unsigned char.
Character handling "In all cases the argument is an int, the value of which shall be representable as an unsigned char or shall equal the value of the macro EOF. If the argument has any other value, the behavior is undefined." C11 §7.4 1
#include <ctype.h>
// Return a pointer to the trimmed string
char *string_trim_inplace(char *s) {
while (isspace((unsigned char) *s)) s++;
if (*s) {
char *p = s;
while (*p) p++;
while (isspace((unsigned char) *(--p)));
p[1] = '\0';
}
// If desired, shift the trimmed string
return s;
}
#chqrlie commented the above does not shift the trimmed string. To do so....
// Return a pointer to the (shifted) trimmed string
char *string_trim_inplace(char *s) {
char *original = s;
size_t len = 0;
while (isspace((unsigned char) *s)) {
s++;
}
if (*s) {
char *p = s;
while (*p) p++;
while (isspace((unsigned char) *(--p)));
p[1] = '\0';
// len = (size_t) (p - s); // older errant code
len = (size_t) (p - s + 1); // Thanks to #theriver
}
return (s == original) ? s : memmove(original, s, len + 1);
}
Here's a solution similar to #adam-rosenfields in-place modification routine but without needlessly resorting to strlen(). Like #jkramer, the string is left-adjusted within the buffer so you can free the same pointer. Not optimal for large strings since it does not use memmove. Includes the ++/-- operators that #jfm3 mentions. FCTX-based unit tests included.
#include <ctype.h>
void trim(char * const a)
{
char *p = a, *q = a;
while (isspace(*q)) ++q;
while (*q) *p++ = *q++;
*p = '\0';
while (p > a && isspace(*--p)) *p = '\0';
}
/* See http://fctx.wildbearsoftware.com/ */
#include "fct.h"
FCT_BGN()
{
FCT_QTEST_BGN(trim)
{
{ char s[] = ""; trim(s); fct_chk_eq_str("", s); } // Trivial
{ char s[] = " "; trim(s); fct_chk_eq_str("", s); } // Trivial
{ char s[] = "\t"; trim(s); fct_chk_eq_str("", s); } // Trivial
{ char s[] = "a"; trim(s); fct_chk_eq_str("a", s); } // NOP
{ char s[] = "abc"; trim(s); fct_chk_eq_str("abc", s); } // NOP
{ char s[] = " a"; trim(s); fct_chk_eq_str("a", s); } // Leading
{ char s[] = " a c"; trim(s); fct_chk_eq_str("a c", s); } // Leading
{ char s[] = "a "; trim(s); fct_chk_eq_str("a", s); } // Trailing
{ char s[] = "a c "; trim(s); fct_chk_eq_str("a c", s); } // Trailing
{ char s[] = " a "; trim(s); fct_chk_eq_str("a", s); } // Both
{ char s[] = " a c "; trim(s); fct_chk_eq_str("a c", s); } // Both
// Villemoes pointed out an edge case that corrupted memory. Thank you.
// http://stackoverflow.com/questions/122616/#comment23332594_4505533
{
char s[] = "a "; // Buffer with whitespace before s + 2
trim(s + 2); // Trim " " containing only whitespace
fct_chk_eq_str("", s + 2); // Ensure correct result from the trim
fct_chk_eq_str("a ", s); // Ensure preceding buffer not mutated
}
// doukremt suggested I investigate this test case but
// did not indicate the specific behavior that was objectionable.
// http://stackoverflow.com/posts/comments/33571430
{
char s[] = " foobar"; // Shifted across whitespace
trim(s); // Trim
fct_chk_eq_str("foobar", s); // Leading string is correct
// Here is what the algorithm produces:
char r[16] = { 'f', 'o', 'o', 'b', 'a', 'r', '\0', ' ',
' ', 'f', 'o', 'o', 'b', 'a', 'r', '\0'};
fct_chk_eq_int(0, memcmp(s, r, sizeof(s)));
}
}
FCT_QTEST_END();
}
FCT_END();
I'm not sure what you consider "painless."
C strings are pretty painful. We can find the first non-whitespace character position trivially:
while (isspace(* p)) p++;
We can find the last non-whitespace character position with two similar trivial moves:
while (* q) q++;
do { q--; } while (isspace(* q));
(I have spared you the pain of using the * and ++ operators at the same time.)
The question now is what do you do with this? The datatype at hand isn't really a big robust abstract String that is easy to think about, but instead really barely any more than an array of storage bytes. Lacking a robust data type, it is impossible to write a function that will do the same as PHperytonby's chomp function. What would such a function in C return?
Another one, with one line doing the real job:
#include <stdio.h>
int main()
{
const char *target = " haha ";
char buf[256];
sscanf(target, "%s", buf); // Trimming on both sides occurs here
printf("<%s>\n", buf);
}
If you're using glib, then you can use g_strstrip
I didn't like most of these answers because they did one or more of the following...
Returned a different pointer inside the original pointer's string (kind of a pain to juggle two different pointers to the same thing).
Made gratuitous use of things like strlen() that pre-iterate the entire string.
Used non-portable OS-specific lib functions.
Backscanned.
Used comparison to ' ' instead of isspace() so that TAB / CR / LF are preserved.
Wasted memory with large static buffers.
Wasted cycles with high-cost functions like sscanf/sprintf.
Here is my version:
void fnStrTrimInPlace(char *szWrite) {
const char *szWriteOrig = szWrite;
char *szLastSpace = szWrite, *szRead = szWrite;
int bNotSpace;
// SHIFT STRING, STARTING AT FIRST NON-SPACE CHAR, LEFTMOST
while( *szRead != '\0' ) {
bNotSpace = !isspace((unsigned char)(*szRead));
if( (szWrite != szWriteOrig) || bNotSpace ) {
*szWrite = *szRead;
szWrite++;
// TRACK POINTER TO LAST NON-SPACE
if( bNotSpace )
szLastSpace = szWrite;
}
szRead++;
}
// TERMINATE AFTER LAST NON-SPACE (OR BEGINNING IF THERE WAS NO NON-SPACE)
*szLastSpace = '\0';
}
Use a string library, for instance:
Ustr *s1 = USTR1(\7, " 12345 ");
ustr_sc_trim_cstr(&s1, " ");
assert(ustr_cmp_cstr_eq(s1, "12345"));
...as you say this is a "common" problem, yes you need to include a #include or so and it's not included in libc but don't go inventing your own hack job storing random pointers and size_t's that way only leads to buffer overflows.
A bit late to the game, but I'll throw my routines into the fray. They're probably not the most absolute efficient, but I believe they're correct and they're simple (with rtrim() pushing the complexity envelope):
#include <ctype.h>
#include <string.h>
/*
Public domain implementations of in-place string trim functions
Michael Burr
michael.burr#nth-element.com
2010
*/
char* ltrim(char* s)
{
char* newstart = s;
while (isspace( *newstart)) {
++newstart;
}
// newstart points to first non-whitespace char (which might be '\0')
memmove( s, newstart, strlen( newstart) + 1); // don't forget to move the '\0' terminator
return s;
}
char* rtrim( char* s)
{
char* end = s + strlen( s);
// find the last non-whitespace character
while ((end != s) && isspace( *(end-1))) {
--end;
}
// at this point either (end == s) and s is either empty or all whitespace
// so it needs to be made empty, or
// end points just past the last non-whitespace character (it might point
// at the '\0' terminator, in which case there's no problem writing
// another there).
*end = '\0';
return s;
}
char* trim( char* s)
{
return rtrim( ltrim( s));
}
Very late to the party...
Single-pass forward-scanning solution with no backtracking. Every character in the source string is tested exactly once twice. (So it should be faster than most of the other solutions here, especially if the source string has a lot of trailing spaces.)
This includes two solutions, one to copy and trim a source string into another destination string, and the other to trim the source string in place. Both functions use the same code.
The (modifiable) string is moved in-place, so the original pointer to it remains unchanged.
#include <stddef.h>
#include <ctype.h>
char * trim2(char *d, const char *s)
{
// Sanity checks
if (s == NULL || d == NULL)
return NULL;
// Skip leading spaces
const unsigned char * p = (const unsigned char *)s;
while (isspace(*p))
p++;
// Copy the string
unsigned char * dst = (unsigned char *)d; // d and s can be the same
unsigned char * end = dst;
while (*p != '\0')
{
if (!isspace(*dst++ = *p++))
end = dst;
}
// Truncate trailing spaces
*end = '\0';
return d;
}
char * trim(char *s)
{
return trim2(s, s);
}
Just to keep this growing, one more option with a modifiable string:
void trimString(char *string)
{
size_t i = 0, j = strlen(string);
while (j > 0 && isspace((unsigned char)string[j - 1])) string[--j] = '\0';
while (isspace((unsigned char)string[i])) i++;
if (i > 0) memmove(string, string + i, j - i + 1);
}
I know there have many answers, but I post my answer here to see if my solution is good enough.
// Trims leading whitespace chars in left `str`, then copy at almost `n - 1` chars
// into the `out` buffer in which copying might stop when the first '\0' occurs,
// and finally append '\0' to the position of the last non-trailing whitespace char.
// Reture the length the trimed string which '\0' is not count in like strlen().
size_t trim(char *out, size_t n, const char *str)
{
// do nothing
if(n == 0) return 0;
// ptr stop at the first non-leading space char
while(isspace(*str)) str++;
if(*str == '\0') {
out[0] = '\0';
return 0;
}
size_t i = 0;
// copy char to out until '\0' or i == n - 1
for(i = 0; i < n - 1 && *str != '\0'; i++){
out[i] = *str++;
}
// deal with the trailing space
while(isspace(out[--i]));
out[++i] = '\0';
return i;
}
The easiest way to skip leading spaces in a string is, imho,
#include <stdio.h>
int main()
{
char *foo=" teststring ";
char *bar;
sscanf(foo,"%s",bar);
printf("String is >%s<\n",bar);
return 0;
}
Ok this is my take on the question. I believe it's the most concise solution that modifies the string in place (free will work) and avoids any UB. For small strings, it's probably faster than a solution involving memmove.
void stripWS_LT(char *str)
{
char *a = str, *b = str;
while (isspace((unsigned char)*a)) a++;
while (*b = *a++) b++;
while (b > str && isspace((unsigned char)*--b)) *b = 0;
}
#include <ctype.h>
#include <string.h>
char *trim_space(char *in)
{
char *out = NULL;
int len;
if (in) {
len = strlen(in);
while(len && isspace(in[len - 1])) --len;
while(len && *in && isspace(*in)) ++in, --len;
if (len) {
out = strndup(in, len);
}
}
return out;
}
isspace helps to trim all white spaces.
Run a first loop to check from last byte for space character and reduce the length variable
Run a second loop to check from first byte for space character and reduce the length variable and increment char pointer.
Finally if length variable is more than 0, then use strndup to create new string buffer by excluding spaces.
This one is short and simple, uses for-loops and doesn't overwrite the string boundaries.
You can replace the test with isspace() if needed.
void trim (char *s) // trim leading and trailing spaces+tabs
{
int i,j,k, len;
j=k=0;
len = strlen(s);
// find start of string
for (i=0; i<len; i++) if ((s[i]!=32) && (s[i]!=9)) { j=i; break; }
// find end of string+1
for (i=len-1; i>=j; i--) if ((s[i]!=32) && (s[i]!=9)) { k=i+1; break;}
if (k<=j) {s[0]=0; return;} // all whitespace (j==k==0)
len=k-j;
for (i=0; i<len; i++) s[i] = s[j++]; // shift result to start of string
s[i]=0; // end the string
}//_trim
If, and ONLY IF there's only one contiguous block of text between whitespace, you can use a single call to strtok(3), like so:
char *trimmed = strtok(input, "\r\t\n ");
This works for strings like the following:
" +1.123.456.7890 "
" 01-01-2020\n"
"\t2.523"
This will not work for strings that contain whitespace between blocks of non-whitespace, like " hi there ". It's probably better to avoid this approach, but now it's here in your toolbox if you need it.
Personally, I'd roll my own. You can use strtok, but you need to take care with doing so (particularly if you're removing leading characters) that you know what memory is what.
Getting rid of trailing spaces is easy, and pretty safe, as you can just put a 0 in over the top of the last space, counting back from the end. Getting rid of leading spaces means moving things around. If you want to do it in place (probably sensible) you can just keep shifting everything back one character until there's no leading space. Or, to be more efficient, you could find the index of the first non-space character, and shift everything back by that number. Or, you could just use a pointer to the first non-space character (but then you need to be careful in the same way as you do with strtok).
#include "stdafx.h"
#include "malloc.h"
#include "string.h"
int main(int argc, char* argv[])
{
char *ptr = (char*)malloc(sizeof(char)*30);
strcpy(ptr," Hel lo wo rl d G eo rocks!!! by shahil sucks b i g tim e");
int i = 0, j = 0;
while(ptr[j]!='\0')
{
if(ptr[j] == ' ' )
{
j++;
ptr[i] = ptr[j];
}
else
{
i++;
j++;
ptr[i] = ptr[j];
}
}
printf("\noutput-%s\n",ptr);
return 0;
}
Most of the answers so far do one of the following:
Backtrack at the end of the string (i.e. find the end of the string and then seek backwards until a non-space character is found,) or
Call strlen() first, making a second pass through the whole string.
This version makes only one pass and does not backtrack. Hence it may perform better than the others, though only if it is common to have hundreds of trailing spaces (which is not unusual when dealing with the output of a SQL query.)
static char const WHITESPACE[] = " \t\n\r";
static void get_trim_bounds(char const *s,
char const **firstWord,
char const **trailingSpace)
{
char const *lastWord;
*firstWord = lastWord = s + strspn(s, WHITESPACE);
do
{
*trailingSpace = lastWord + strcspn(lastWord, WHITESPACE);
lastWord = *trailingSpace + strspn(*trailingSpace, WHITESPACE);
}
while (*lastWord != '\0');
}
char *copy_trim(char const *s)
{
char const *firstWord, *trailingSpace;
char *result;
size_t newLength;
get_trim_bounds(s, &firstWord, &trailingSpace);
newLength = trailingSpace - firstWord;
result = malloc(newLength + 1);
memcpy(result, firstWord, newLength);
result[newLength] = '\0';
return result;
}
void inplace_trim(char *s)
{
char const *firstWord, *trailingSpace;
size_t newLength;
get_trim_bounds(s, &firstWord, &trailingSpace);
newLength = trailingSpace - firstWord;
memmove(s, firstWord, newLength);
s[newLength] = '\0';
}
This is the shortest possible implementation I can think of:
static const char *WhiteSpace=" \n\r\t";
char* trim(char *t)
{
char *e=t+(t!=NULL?strlen(t):0); // *e initially points to end of string
if (t==NULL) return;
do --e; while (strchr(WhiteSpace, *e) && e>=t); // Find last char that is not \r\n\t
*(++e)=0; // Null-terminate
e=t+strspn (t,WhiteSpace); // Find first char that is not \t
return e>t?memmove(t,e,strlen(e)+1):t; // memmove string contents and terminator
}
These functions will modify the original buffer, so if dynamically allocated, the original
pointer can be freed.
#include <string.h>
void rstrip(char *string)
{
int l;
if (!string)
return;
l = strlen(string) - 1;
while (isspace(string[l]) && l >= 0)
string[l--] = 0;
}
void lstrip(char *string)
{
int i, l;
if (!string)
return;
l = strlen(string);
while (isspace(string[(i = 0)]))
while(i++ < l)
string[i-1] = string[i];
}
void strip(char *string)
{
lstrip(string);
rstrip(string);
}
What do you think about using StrTrim function defined in header Shlwapi.h.? It is straight forward rather defining on your own.
Details can be found on:
http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/windows/desktop/bb773454(v=vs.85).aspx
If you have
char ausCaptain[]="GeorgeBailey ";
StrTrim(ausCaptain," ");
This will give ausCaptain as "GeorgeBailey" not "GeorgeBailey ".
To trim my strings from the both sides I use the oldie but the gooody ;)
It can trim anything with ascii less than a space, meaning that the control chars will be trimmed also !
char *trimAll(char *strData)
{
unsigned int L = strlen(strData);
if(L > 0){ L--; }else{ return strData; }
size_t S = 0, E = L;
while((!(strData[S] > ' ') || !(strData[E] > ' ')) && (S >= 0) && (S <= L) && (E >= 0) && (E <= L))
{
if(strData[S] <= ' '){ S++; }
if(strData[E] <= ' '){ E--; }
}
if(S == 0 && E == L){ return strData; } // Nothing to be done
if((S >= 0) && (S <= L) && (E >= 0) && (E <= L)){
L = E - S + 1;
memmove(strData,&strData[S],L); strData[L] = '\0';
}else{ strData[0] = '\0'; }
return strData;
}
I'm only including code because the code posted so far seems suboptimal (and I don't have the rep to comment yet.)
void inplace_trim(char* s)
{
int start, end = strlen(s);
for (start = 0; isspace(s[start]); ++start) {}
if (s[start]) {
while (end > 0 && isspace(s[end-1]))
--end;
memmove(s, &s[start], end - start);
}
s[end - start] = '\0';
}
char* copy_trim(const char* s)
{
int start, end;
for (start = 0; isspace(s[start]); ++start) {}
for (end = strlen(s); end > 0 && isspace(s[end-1]); --end) {}
return strndup(s + start, end - start);
}
strndup() is a GNU extension. If you don't have it or something equivalent, roll your own. For example:
r = strdup(s + start);
r[end-start] = '\0';
Here i use the dynamic memory allocation to trim the input string to the function trimStr. First, we find how many non-empty characters exist in the input string. Then, we allocate a character array with that size and taking care of the null terminated character. When we use this function, we need to free the memory inside of main function.
#include<stdio.h>
#include<stdlib.h>
char *trimStr(char *str){
char *tmp = str;
printf("input string %s\n",str);
int nc = 0;
while(*tmp!='\0'){
if (*tmp != ' '){
nc++;
}
tmp++;
}
printf("total nonempty characters are %d\n",nc);
char *trim = NULL;
trim = malloc(sizeof(char)*(nc+1));
if (trim == NULL) return NULL;
tmp = str;
int ne = 0;
while(*tmp!='\0'){
if (*tmp != ' '){
trim[ne] = *tmp;
ne++;
}
tmp++;
}
trim[nc] = '\0';
printf("trimmed string is %s\n",trim);
return trim;
}
int main(void){
char str[] = " s ta ck ove r fl o w ";
char *trim = trimStr(str);
if (trim != NULL )free(trim);
return 0;
}

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