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Doubt

This is the code , when I am running it , it says gets() is declared implicitly #include <stdio.h> #include <string.h> int main() { char s[20]; int i=0; printf("Enter A string"); get(s); while(s[i]!='\0') { if(s[i]=='') { s[i]=s[i+1]; s[i+1]=''; } i++; } printf("%s",s); return 0;

4th Jun 2020, 7:12 AM
VISHAL JAYMANGAL DEDAVAT
1 Réponse
+ 2
`gets()` is a deprecated library function in C11 and no longer exists a prototype for it in <stdio.h> header file *. You should go for `fgets()` istead which provides a better safety measure compared to its old counterpart. Syntax: char * fgets ( char * str, int num, FILE * stream ) where `str` is the name of the character container, `num` is the size of the container, and `stream` refers to the desired input port (a file or stdin). The above code transforms to #include <stdio.h> #include <string.h> int main() { char s[20]; int i=0; printf("Enter A string"); fgets(s, 20, stdin); while(s[i]!='\0') { if(s[i]==' ') { s[i]=s[i+1]; s[i+1]=' '; } i++; } printf("%s",s); return 0; } Notice, a pair of quotation marks without any character between them (empty character constant) is an illegal form and therefore the compiler issues an error message. ______ * https://port70.net/~nsz/c/c11/n1570.html#Forewordp6 " removed the gets function (<stdio.h>) "
4th Jun 2020, 7:39 AM
Babak
Babak - avatar