Strings কে সঠিক ভাবে ফরম্যাট করা ও ব্যবহার করা

Submitted by administrator on Mon, 01/02/2012 - 15:55

CLASS 13 - Manipulating Strings

 

In the last hour's lesson you learned how to use arrays to collect variables of the same type. You also learned that a character string is actually a character array ended with a null character \0. In this lesson you'll learn more about strings and C functions that can be used to manipulate strings. The following topics are covered:

    Declaring a string
    The length of a string
    Copying strings
    Reading strings with scanf(
    The gets() and puts() functions




Summary

  •     A string is a character array with a null character as the terminator at the last element.
  •     A string constant is a series of characters enclosed by double quotes.
  •     The C compiler automatically appends a null character to the array that has been initialized by a string constant.
  •     You cannot assign a string constant to a dereferenced char pointer.
  •     The strlen() function can be used to measure the length of a string. This function does not count the null character in the last element.
  •     You can copy a string from one array to another by calling the C function strcpy().
  •     The gets() function can be used to read a series of characters. This function stops reading when the newline character or end-of-file (EOF) is encountered. A null character is attached to the array that stores the characters automatically after the reading.
  •     The puts() function sends all characters, except the null character, in a string to the stdout, and appends a newline character to the output.
  •     You can read different data items with the scanf() function by using various format specifiers.


 

Related Items

Using the Precision Specifier

Using the Precision Specifier

Aligning Output

Aligning Output
As you might have noticed in the previous section, all output is right-justified. In other words, by default, all output is placed on the right edge of the field, as long as the field width is longer than the width of the output.

 

Adding the Minimum Field Width

Adding the Minimum Field Width

Converting to Hex Numbers

Converting to Hex Numbers

Revisiting the printf() Function

Revisiting the printf() Function

The printf() function is the first C library function you used in this book to print out messages on the screen. printf() is a very important function in C, so it's worth it to spend more time on it.