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outputting ascii table in C++

code:

#include <iostream>
#include <iomanip>
using namespace std;

class Ascii_output {
public:
    void run() {
        print_ascii();
    }
private:
    void print_ascii() {
        int i, j;                                                           // i is         used to print the first element of each row
                                                                        // j is used to print subsequent columns of a given row
    char ch;                                                            // ch stores the character which is to be printed
    cout << left;

    for (i = 32; i < 64; i++) {                                         // 33 rows are printed out (64-32+1)
        ch = i;
        if (ch != '\n')                                                 // replaces any newline printouts with a blank character
            cout << setw(3) << i << " " << setw(6) << ch;
        else
            cout << setw(3) << i << " " << setw(6);

        for (j = 1; j < 7; j++) {                                       // decides the amount of columns to be printed out, "j < 7" dictates this
            ch += 32*j;                                                 // offsets the column by a multiple of 32
            if (ch != '\n')                                             // replaces any newline printouts with a blank character
                cout << setw(3) << i+(32*j) << " " << setw(6) << ch;
            else
                cout << setw(3) << i+(32*j) << " " << setw(6);
        }

        cout << endl;
    }
    }
};

output: enter image description here

Why do I not get a properly indented output and weird characters at the values 96 - 255 ?

like image 848
Petrus K. Avatar asked Jan 19 '26 02:01

Petrus K.


1 Answers

This line doesn't do the right thing:

ch += 32*j;

You want to count by 32, that's either

ch += 32;

or

ch = i + 32*j;

I strongly recommend making the numeric and character values match during your output. So change

cout << setw(3) << i+(32*j) << " " << setw(6) << ch;

to

cout << setw(3) << int(ch) << " " << setw(6) << ch;
like image 55
Ben Voigt Avatar answered Jan 21 '26 19:01

Ben Voigt



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