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Full Discussion: Compare Char to String
Top Forums Programming Compare Char to String Post 68935 by milhan on Friday 8th of April 2005 01:05:40 PM
Old 04-08-2005
let me make sure I understand the problem :
So, you have a file of english words. when the program starts it prompts the user to enter a char string of no longer than 5 elements, then the program will scan through the file to see if all the characters of user input match any of the words in the file; if so it will output all the matching(created) words.
Example : say your file file.dat contains

beer
apple
bread
read
dear
dare

and you enter as input : aerd

then your program will spit out the 3 words in the file : read, dear, dare since they match all chars in the input. Is that correct? Or should it match the whole word as is, that is, if you enter aerd, it will look necessarily for aerd?
 

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british-english-large(5)					   Users' Manual					  british-english-large(5)

NAME
british-english-large - a list of English words DESCRIPTION
/usr/share/dict/british-english-large is an ASCII file which contains an alphabetic list of words, one per line. FILES
There may be any number of word lists in /usr/share/dict/. /etc/dictionaries-common/words is a symbolic link to the currently-chosen /usr/share/dict/<language> file. /usr/share/dict/words is a symbolic link to /etc/dictionaries-common/words, and is the name by which other software should refer to the system word list. See select-default-wordlist(8) for more information, and/or to change the currently- chosen word list. The directory /usr/share/dict can contain word lists for many languages, with name of the language in English, e.g., /usr/share/dict/french and /usr/share/dict/danish contain respectively lists of French and Danish words if they exist. Such lists should be coded using the ISO 8859-1 character set encoding. SEE ALSO
ispell(1), select-default-wordlist(8), and the Filesystem Hierarchy Standard. HISTORY
The words lists are not specific, and may be generated from any number of sources. The system word list used to be /usr/dict/words. For compatibility, software should check that location if /usr/share/dict/words does not exist. AUTHOR
Word lists are collected and maintained by various authors. The Debian English word lists are built from the SCOWL (Spell- Checker Ori- ented Word Lists) package, whose upstream editor is Kevin Atkinson <kevina@users.sourceforge.net>. Debian 16 June 2003 british-english-large(5)
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