I found so incredibly many question posts of this sort - i'm speaking of "convert string to char array" - but none of those solutions actually work for me, trying to convert cin >> text into some char array textArray[1024] which I could then convert into a list cause I think it's easier to work with.
The Problem is: Spaces. Every time when there's a space in there, it just skips the following actions and punches me with my own error messeges.
It's for some encryptor (code down below).
If there's any easier way of doing this then let me know.
#include <iostream>
#include <string>
#include <fstream>
#include <list>
#include "encryptor.h"
using namespace std;
void encrypt()
{
string text;
char textArray[1024];
list<char> listText;
list<char>::iterator it;
int textSize;
string code;
bool fail = false;
string segment;
string fileName;
cout << "Now enter your text. (max 1024 chars)" << endl;
cin >> text;
textSize = text.size();
//string to char[]
//none of these work
strncpy(textArray, text.c_str(), sizeof(textArray));
textArray[sizeof(text) - 1] = 0;
strcpy_s(textArray, text.c_str());
for (int i = 0; i < text.length(); i++)
{
textArray[i] = text[i];
}
aText[text.length()] = '\0';
text.copy(textArray, text.length()+1);
//char[] to list
for(int i = 0; i < textSize; i++)
{
char *c = new char(textArray[i]);
listText.push_back(*c);
}
//Going through list
//for every char there's a special segment added to the string
for(it = listText.begin(); it != listText.end(); it++)
{
if(fail == true) break;
switch (*it)
{
case 'a':
case 'A':
{
segment = "XQ7";
} break;
{/*---*/} //I just let everything from b - z and 0 - 9 out for this post
case ' ':
{
segment = "Z 7";
} break;
case '.':
{
segment = "Z 8";
} break;
case ',':
{
segment = "Z 4";
} break;
default:
{
cout << "There's a special char this program doesn't understand. It is "
cout << *it << endl;
cout << "Do it again" << endl;
fail = true;
} break;
}
code = code + segment;
}
do
{
cout << "\n\nname of the file: ";
cin >> fileName;
if(fileName != "")
{
ofstream write;
write.open(fileName + ".txt");
write << code;
write.close();
} else {
cout << "Name shouldn't be empty!" << endl;
}
} while(fileName == "");
}
sizeof, it evaluates to the size in memory of either a given expression or an instance of a given type.sizeof(text)issizeof(std::string)which is completely unrelated to the actual string's size what you want istext.size()(it works for textArray though, but you're potentially accessing memory outside of text.c_str() and it isn't really elegant)textArray[sizeof(text) - 1] = 0;is uselesstext.c_str()is already null terminated (and that should be '\0' rather than 0). (set aside the error pointed above concerningtext's size)aTextwas the old name of textArray. Seems if i didn't update it yet. Also I added what's wrong. I'm sorry - this is my first post and i'm quite new concerning programming.text.size()where you currently havesizeof(text). The code you're using is attempting to set a hard nullchar terminator on the lastcharintextArray(and rightly so, as thestrncpywill not terminate the string iftext.c_str()brings a string larger thantextArraycan hold). UsingtextArray[text.size()]doesn't solve the problem. if the string was too long to begin with that still invokes undefined behavior. Rather, it should betextArray[sizeof textArray - 1].