I need to match a float inside a very long string (about 5000 chars) with sscanf. (I trimmed the string in this example.) I can't seem to match all the chars that come before and after the float.
I have a string
Form this string, I want to extract
I am unable to do that with sscanf because of the space between the words. What else can I use?
#include <stdio.h>
char buf_2;
int
main()
{
char *buf_1 = "\\\\?\\whats going on";
sscanf(buf_1,... (4 Replies)
Hi everybody,
i need help with this function, i'm programming in CGI with C and i can't make this work.
QUERY_STRING is something like: user=MYUSER&pass=MYPASS
So, what i want is to store the strings containing the username and the password into str1 and str2 respetively, here's the... (4 Replies)
sscanf does not stop at the first "&". How can I extract "doe" ?
char A = "name=john&last=doe&job=vacant&";
char B = "last";
char C = "";
char *POINTER = strstr(A, B);
sscanf(POINTER + strlen(B), "=%s%*", C);
printf("%s\n", C); // doe&job=vacant& (2 Replies)
How can I separetely extract the string and int after "dribble" ? (sscanf must limit TEXT to 9 chars to avoid buffer overflows.)
How come this code does not work with "dribbletext08" but does with "dribbletext05" ?
int main(void)
{
char TEXT = "";
int NUMBER = 0;
... (2 Replies)
Hi with the following code
int a, b;
while ((n = readline (connfd, buf, sizeof(buf)-1)) > 0)
{
buf = '\0';
if (sscanf(buf,"%d %d",&a,&b) != 2)
snprintf (buf, sizeof(buf), "data error\r\n");
else
{
printf("\nRecvd %d and %d",a,b);
... (1 Reply)
Hello, I have formatted lines delimited by colon ":", and I need to parse the line into two parts with sscanf() with format specifiers.
infile.txt:
Sample Name: sample1
SNPs : 91
MNPs : 1
Insertions : 5
Deletions ... (13 Replies)
Discussion started by: yifangt
13 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
matcheditor
MatchEditor(3I) InterViews Reference Manual MatchEditor(3I)NAME
MatchEditor - StringEditor with pattern matching
SYNOPSIS
#include <InterViews/matcheditor.h>
DESCRIPTION
MatchEditor is a StringEditor subclass that checks the validity of its contents against a specified pattern. It is suitable for entering
strings that must conform to a particular format such as a number or a file name. The matching pattern is specified according to the rules
of scanf(3). For example, a pattern of "%3d" will match a 3-digit integer, a pattern of "%[ab]" will match a string containing only a's
and b's, and a pattern of "(%f, %f)" will match the string "(12.0, 5E23)".
PUBLIC OPERATIONS
MatchEditor(ButtonState*, const char* sample, const char* done)
Create a new MatchEditor object. The ButtonState, sample string, and termination string are passed to the StringEditor constructor.
void Match(const char* pattern, boolean keystroke = true)
Specify the pattern to match against. When MatchEditor performs matching, it will highlight any trailing part of the edit string
that does not conform to pattern. The user can then correct the string. If keystroke is true, matching will occur on every key-
stroke; otherwise matching will only occur on the completion of the edit. The initial pattern matches any string, and the initial
value of keystroke is true.
RESTRICTIONS
MatchEditor uses sscanf internally to check the pattern match. Different versions of sscanf have different scanning capabilities; check
with your local version to see what patterns you can use.
SEE ALSO StringEditor(3I)InterViews 7 Dec 1989 MatchEditor(3I)