I learnt C in uni but haven't used it for quite a few years. Recently I started working on a tool which uses C as the programming language. Now I'm stuck with some really basic functions. Among them are how to split and join strings using a delimiter? (I miss Python so much, even Java or C#!)
Below is the function I created to split a string, but it does not seem to work properly. Also, even this function works, the delimiter can only be a single character. How can I use a string as a delimiter?
Can someone please provide some help?
Ideally, I would like to have 2 functions:
// Split a string into a string array
char** fSplitStr(char *str, const char *delimiter);
// Join the elements of a string array to a single string
char* fJoinStr(char **str, const char *delimiter);
Thank you,
Allen
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <time.h>
char** fSplitStr(char *str, const char *delimiters)
{
char * token;
char **tokenArray;
int count=0;
token = (char *)strtok(str, delimiters); // Get the first token
tokenArray = (char**)malloc(1 * sizeof(char*));
if (!token) {
return tokenArray;
}
while (token != NULL ) { // While valid tokens are returned
tokenArray[count] = (char*)malloc(sizeof(token));
tokenArray[count] = token;
printf ("%s", tokenArray[count]);
count++;
tokenArray = (char **)realloc(tokenArray, sizeof(char *) * count);
token = (char *)strtok(NULL, delimiters); // Get the next token
}
return tokenArray;
}
int main (void)
{
char str[] = "Split_The_String";
char ** splitArray = fSplitStr(str,"_");
printf ("%s", splitArray[0]);
printf ("%s", splitArray[1]);
printf ("%s", splitArray[2]);
return 0;
}
Answers: (Thanks to Moshbear, Joachim and sarnold):
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <time.h>
char** fStrSplit(char *str, const char *delimiters)
{
char * token;
char **tokenArray;
int count=0;
token = (char *)strtok(str, delimiters); // Get the first token
tokenArray = (char**)malloc(1 * sizeof(char*));
tokenArray[0] = NULL;
if (!token) {
return tokenArray;
}
while (token != NULL) { // While valid tokens are returned
tokenArray[count] = (char*)strdup(token);
//printf ("%s", tokenArray[count]);
count++;
tokenArray = (char **)realloc(tokenArray, sizeof(char *) * (count + 1));
token = (char *)strtok(NULL, delimiters); // Get the next token
}
tokenArray[count] = NULL; /* Terminate the array */
return tokenArray;
}
char* fStrJoin(char **str, const char *delimiters)
{
char *joinedStr;
int i = 1;
joinedStr = realloc(NULL, strlen(str[0])+1);
strcpy(joinedStr, str[0]);
if (str[0] == NULL){
return joinedStr;
}
while (str[i] !=NULL){
joinedStr = (char*)realloc(joinedStr, strlen(joinedStr) + strlen(str[i]) + strlen(delimiters) + 1);
strcat(joinedStr, delimiters);
strcat(joinedStr, str[i]);
i++;
}
return joinedStr;
}
int main (void)
{
char str[] = "Split_The_String";
char ** splitArray = (char **)fStrSplit(str,"_");
char * joinedStr;
int i=0;
while (splitArray[i]!=NULL) {
printf ("%s", splitArray[i]);
i++;
}
joinedStr = fStrJoin(splitArray, "-");
printf ("%s", joinedStr);
return 0;
}
Use strpbrk instead of strtok, because strtok suffers from two weaknesses:
For joining, use strncat for joining, and realloc for resizing.
The order of operations is very important.
Before doing the realloc;strncat loop, set the 0th element of the target string to '\0' so that strncat won't cause undefined behavior.
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