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Full Discussion: Help with pattern matching
Top Forums Programming Help with pattern matching Post 302403989 by jim mcnamara on Monday 15th of March 2010 08:32:30 AM
Old 03-15-2010
Code:
[[something is something]] [[and then I was [[wondering]] why is  [[this like so]]]]

If you were ever unfortunate and had to code lisp, this was a common problem.
There was a kind of descent parse: incrementing and decrementing a counter. When the counter got back to zero you were at the end of the line/command.

C:
Code:
int foo(char *src)
{
   char dest[80][120]={0x0};
   char *p=NULL;
   char *q=NULL;
   int line=0;
   int count=0;

   for(p=src, q=dest[line]; *p; p++)
   {
        if(*p=='[') count++;
        if(*p==']') count--;
        if(!count && *p==']')
        {
              line++;
              q=dest[line];
             
        }
        if(!count) continue;
        *q=*p;
          q++;
   }
}

You will have to knock off the leading and trailing square brackets. This also does not handle inter-string characters like spaces.

Last edited by jim mcnamara; 03-15-2010 at 10:54 AM..
 

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STRCAT(3)						     Linux Programmer's Manual							 STRCAT(3)

NAME
strcat, strncat - concatenate two strings SYNOPSIS
#include <string.h> char *strcat(char *dest, const char *src); char *strncat(char *dest, const char *src, size_t n); DESCRIPTION
The strcat() function appends the src string to the dest string, overwriting the null byte ('') at the end of dest, and then adds a ter- minating null byte. The strings may not overlap, and the dest string must have enough space for the result. The strncat() function is similar, except that * it will use at most n characters from src; and * src does not need to be null-terminated if it contains n or more characters. As with strcat(), the resulting string in dest is always null-terminated. If src contains n or more characters, strncat() writes n+1 characters to dest (n from src plus the terminating null byte). Therefore, the size of dest must be at least strlen(dest)+n+1. A simple implementation of strncat() might be: char* strncat(char *dest, const char *src, size_t n) { size_t dest_len = strlen(dest); size_t i; for (i = 0 ; i < n && src[i] != '' ; i++) dest[dest_len + i] = src[i]; dest[dest_len + i] = ''; return dest; } RETURN VALUE
The strcat() and strncat() functions return a pointer to the resulting string dest. CONFORMING TO
SVr4, 4.3BSD, C89, C99. SEE ALSO
bcopy(3), memccpy(3), memcpy(3), strcpy(3), strncpy(3), wcscat(3), wcsncat(3) COLOPHON
This page is part of release 3.25 of the Linux man-pages project. A description of the project, and information about reporting bugs, can be found at http://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/. GNU
2008-06-13 STRCAT(3)
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