Tengo una duda sobre castear una variable char a int
Piden escribir una función para imprimir todos los número de un array
Este es el array
#include <stdio.h>
#include "stats.h"
#include <stdint.h>
/* Size of the Data Set */
#define SIZE (40)
void main()
{
unsigned char test[SIZE] = { 34, 201, 190, 154, 8, 194, 2, 6,
114, 88, 45, 76, 123, 87, 25, 23,
200, 122, 150, 90, 92, 87, 177, 244,
201, 6, 12, 60, 8, 2, 5, 67,
7, 87, 250, 230, 99, 3, 100, 90};
/* Other Variable Declarations Go Here */
/* Statistics and Printing Functions Go Here */
print_array( &test, SIZE);
}
Esta es la función
void print_array(unsigned char *array, unsigned int length)
{
int i,j;
//size_t i;
for (i = 0; i < length; i++)
{
//printf("array[%d] = %d\r\n ", (int)array[i]);
printf("%d\r ", (int)array[i]);
}
}
Al compilar genera este resultado:
stats.c: In function ‘main’: stats.c:42:3: warning: passing argument 1 of ‘print_array’ from incompatible pointer type [enabled by default] print_array( &test, SIZE); ^ In file included from stats.c:26:0: stats.h:56:6: note: expected ‘unsigned char ’ but argument is of type ‘unsigned char ()[40]’ void print_array(unsigned char *array, unsigned int length); ^
¿Cuál es la forma correcta de hacer el casteo de (unsigned char* a int para poder imprimir los elementos del array?`
void print_array(unsigned char *array, unsigned int length)
{
int i,j;
//size_t i;
for (i = 0; i < length; i++){
//printf("array[%d] = %d\r\n ", (int)array[i]);
printf("%d\r ", (int)array[i]);
}
}`
En la función print_array la variable j no cumple la función de segundo item de una matríz porque lo que se desea es hacer que la función imprima el arreglo:
unsigned char test[SIZE] = { 34, 201, 190, 154, 8, 194, 2, 6,
114, 88, 45, 76, 123, 87, 25, 23,
200, 122, 150, 90, 92, 87, 177, 244,
201, 6, 12, 60, 8, 2, 5, 67,
7, 87, 250, 230, 99, 3, 100, 90};
Porque el enunciado, en inglés dice: find_median() - Given an array of data and a length, returns the median value
Para ello desarrollé:
void print_array(unsigned char *array, unsigned int length){
int i;
for (i = 0; i < length; i++){
printf("array[%d] = %d\r\n ", i, (int)array[i]);
}
}
Luego en la función main ():
#include <stdio.h>
#include "stats.h"
#include <stdint.h>
/* Size of the Data Set */
#define SIZE (40)
void main() {
unsigned char test[SIZE] = { 34, 201, 190, 154, 8, 194, 2, 6,
114, 88, 45, 76, 123, 87, 25, 23,
200, 122, 150, 90, 92, 87, 177, 244,
201, 6, 12, 60, 8, 2, 5, 67,
7, 87, 250, 230, 99, 3, 100, 90};
/* Other Variable Declarations Go Here */
/* Statistics and Printing Functions Go Here */
print_array( test, SIZE);
}
Al compilar dió como reusltado:
array[0] = 34
array[1] = 201
array[2] = 190
array[3] = 154
array[4] = 8
array[5] = 194
array[6] = 2
array[7] = 6
array[8] = 114
array[9] = 88
.
.
.
¿Por qué con la sentencia print_array( &test, SIZE);
genera el siguiente mensaje de compilación?
¿ print_array( &test, SIZE);
no es la forma correcta de llamar a la funión?
stats.c: In function ‘main’: stats.c:42:3: warning: passing argument 1 of ‘print_array’ from incompatible pointer type [enabled by default] print_array( &test, SIZE); ^ In file included from stats.c:26:0: stats.h:56:6: note: expected ‘unsigned char ’ but argument is of type ‘unsigned char ()[40]’ void print_array(unsigned char *array, unsigned int length);