Good afternoon, my question is conceptual. How can I make it generate a "fancy" error when the user incorrectly enters some data that does not correspond to the scanf() function? So as to only allow integers to be entered in the example below (not characters or array of characters or an inappropriate data).
For example:
#include <stdio.h>
int a;
printf("Enter a number\n");
scanf("%d", &a); //the user is supposed to enter a number
printf("Your number is %d ", a);
//but if the user enters something inappropriate, like a character, the program leads to
//undetermined behavior (which as I understand it interprets said character according to its
//value in the ASCII code).
From already thank you very much
CodePudding user response:
In order to determine whether scanf
was able to successfully convert the input to an integer, you should check the return value of scanf
:
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
int main( void )
{
int num;
printf( "Enter a number: " );
if ( scanf( "%d", &num ) != 1 )
{
printf( "Failed to convert input!\n" );
exit( EXIT_FAILURE );
}
printf( "Conversion successful! The number is %d.\n", num );
}
However, using scanf
for line-based user input is generally not recommended, because scanf
does not behave in an intuitive manner when dealing with that kind of input. For example, scanf
will generally not consume an entire line of input at once. Instead, it will generally only consume the input that matches the argument, but will leave the rest of the line on the input stream, including the newline character.
Leaving the newline character on the input stream can already cause a lot of trouble. For example, see this question.
Also, if the user enters for example 6abc
, then scanf
will successfully match the 6
and report success, but leave abc
on the input stream, so that the next call to scanf
will probably immediately fail.
For this reason, it is generally better to always read one line of input at a time, using the function fgets
. After successfully reading one line of input as a string, you can use the function strtol
to attempt to convert the string to an integer:
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
int main( void )
{
char line[200], *p;
int num;
//prompt user for input
printf( "Enter a number: " );
//attempt to read one line of input
if ( fgets( line, sizeof line, stdin ) == NULL )
{
printf( "Input failure!\n" );
exit( EXIT_FAILURE );
}
//attempt to convert strint to integer
num = strtol( line, &p, 10 );
if ( p == line )
{
printf( "Unable to convert to integer!\n" );
exit( EXIT_FAILURE );
}
//print result
printf( "Conversion successful! The number is %d.\n", num );
}
However, this code has the following issues:
It does not check whether the input line was too long to fit into the buffer.
It does not check whether the converted number is representable as an
int
, i.e. whether the value the user entered is too large to be stored in anint
.It will accept
6abc
as valid input for the number6
. This is not as bad asscanf
, becausescanf
will leaveabc
on the input stream, whereasfgets
will not. However, it would probably still be better to reject the input instead of accepting it.
Here is an improved version of the code, which solves the issues mentioned above and also puts everything into a function. This function will reprompt the user for input, until the input is valid.
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <string.h>
#include <ctype.h>
#include <limits.h>
#include <errno.h>
int get_int_from_user( const char *prompt )
{
//loop forever until user enters a valid number
for (;;)
{
char buffer[1024], *p;
long l;
//prompt user for input
fputs( prompt, stdout );
//get one line of input from input stream
if ( fgets( buffer, sizeof buffer, stdin ) == NULL )
{
fprintf( stderr, "Unrecoverable input error!\n" );
exit( EXIT_FAILURE );
}
//make sure that entire line was read in (i.e. that
//the buffer was not too small)
if ( strchr( buffer, '\n' ) == NULL && !feof( stdin ) )
{
int c;
printf( "Line input was too long!\n" );
//discard remainder of line
do
{
c = getchar();
if ( c == EOF )
{
fprintf( stderr, "Unrecoverable error reading from input!\n" );
exit( EXIT_FAILURE );
}
} while ( c != '\n' );
continue;
}
//attempt to convert string to number
errno = 0;
l = strtol( buffer, &p, 10 );
if ( p == buffer )
{
printf( "Error converting string to number!\n" );
continue;
}
//make sure that number is representable as an "int"
if ( errno == ERANGE || l < INT_MIN || l > INT_MAX )
{
printf( "Number out of range error!\n" );
continue;
}
//make sure that remainder of line contains only whitespace,
//so that input such as "6abc" gets rejected
for ( ; *p != '\0'; p )
{
if ( !isspace( (unsigned char)*p ) )
{
printf( "Unexpected input encountered!\n" );
//cannot use `continue` here, because that would go to
//the next iteration of the innermost loop, but we
//want to go to the next iteration of the outer loop
goto continue_outer_loop;
}
}
return l;
continue_outer_loop:
continue;
}
}
int main( void )
{
int number;
number = get_int_from_user( "Enter a number: " );
printf( "Input was valid.\n" );
printf( "The number is: %d\n", number );
return 0;
}
This program has the following behavior:
Enter a number: abc
Error converting string to number!
Enter a number: 6000000000
Number out of range error!
Enter a number: 6 7 8
Unexpected input encountered!
Enter a number: 6abc
Unexpected input encountered!
Enter a number: 6
Input was valid.
The number is: 6
CodePudding user response:
How to get verified user input of a specific type
#1 Get user input as a string
char s[100];
if (!fgets( s, sizeof(s), stdin )) *s = '\0';
char * p = strptok( s, "\r\n" );
if (!p) complain_and_quit();
*p = '\0';
...
Alternately:
#define __STDC_WANT_LIB_EXT2__ 1
#include <stdio.h>
char * s = NULL;
size_t n = 0;
if (getline( &s, &n, stdin ) < 0)
{
free( s );
complain_and_quit();
}
...
free( s );
#2 Get rid of any trailing whitespace
This could easily be put in a trim()
function, but here we’ll spell it out:
Can’t believe I forgot this step. Sorry.