I'm trying to set up a code that counts the whole string and doesn't stop after the first space that it finds. How do I do that?
I tried this kind of code but it just counts the first word then goes to display the number of letters in that first word.
So far this is what I have tried.
int main(){
char get[100];
int i, space=0, len=0, tot;
scanf("%s", get);
for (i=0; get[i]!='\0'; i++)
{
if (get[i] == ' ')
space++;
else
len++;
}
tot = space + len;
printf("%i", tot);
}
And
int main(){
char get[100];
int len;
scanf("%s", &get);
len = strlen(get);
printf("%i", len);
}
But would still get the same answer as the first one.
I expected that if the input: The fox is gorgeous. output: 19
But all I get is input: The fox is gorgeous. output: 3
strlen already includes spaces, since it counts the length of the string up to the terminating NUL character (zero, '\0').
Your problem is that that the %s conversion of scanf stops reading when it encounters whitespace, so your string never included it in the first place (you can verify this easily by printing out the string). (You could fix it by using different scanf conversions, but in general it's easier to get things right by reading with fgets – it also forces you to specify the buffer size, fixing the potential buffer overflow in your current code.)
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