Reputation: 301
With your help I could take the input from a text file (input.txt) where lines consisted of city1 city2 distance ... and write the names of cities in a matrix without repetition. According to this matrix I wrote a piece of code to add their distances in a adjacency matrix. But the output looks weird I mean, it is not correct. I guess in my code below should be something missing or wrong. Any little help is highly appreciated.
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <string.h>
#include <ctype.h>
int main(int argc, char *argv[]){
int i=1,j, state=0, k, dist,x=0,y=0;
int** myMat;
char *city1, *city2, **matnames;
FILE* p;
city1 = (char*) malloc(sizeof(char));
city2 = (char*) malloc(sizeof(char));
matnames = (char**) malloc(sizeof(char*));
myMat = (int**) malloc(sizeof(int*)*4);
p = fopen(argv[1],"r");
/************************************************************/
matnames[0] = (char*) malloc(sizeof(char));
matnames[1] = (char*) malloc(sizeof(char));
matnames[2] = (char*) malloc(sizeof(char));
matnames[2] = NULL;
fscanf(p, "%s %s %d", city1, city2, &dist);
strcpy(matnames[0],city1);
strcpy(matnames[1],city2);
/************************************************************/
for(i=0;i<3;i++){
myMat[i] = (int*) malloc(sizeof(int));
}
myMat[1][2] = dist; /* the first two distances placed at matnames */
myMat[2][1] = dist;
/************************************************************/
while( fscanf(p,"%s %s %d",city1,city2, &dist) != EOF){
for(j=0; matnames[j]!=NULL; j++){
if( strcmp(matnames[j], city1) != 0){
state++;
}
}
if(state == j){
matnames = realloc(matnames, sizeof(char*)*(j+3));
matnames[j] = (char*) malloc(sizeof(char));
strcpy(matnames[j], city1);
matnames[j+1] = (char*) malloc(sizeof(char));
matnames[j+1] = NULL;
}
state = 0;
for(j=0; strcmp(matnames[j], city1) != 0;j++){
x++; /* "x" finds the city1 indeks from matnames*/
}
for(k=0; matnames[k] != NULL;k++){
if( strcmp(matnames[k], city2) != 0){
state++;
}
}
if(state == k){
matnames = realloc(matnames, sizeof(char*)*(k+4));
matnames[k] = (char*) malloc(sizeof(char));
matnames[k+1] = (char*) malloc(sizeof(char));
strcpy(matnames[k], city2);
matnames[k+1] = NULL;
}
state = 0;
/* till to here the names of cities are placed in matnames without repetion*/
for(j=0; strcmp(matnames[j], city2) != 0;j++){
y++; /* "y" finds the city2 indeks from matnames*/
}
/****** the problem should be in this part */
myMat = realloc(myMat,sizeof(int*)*(k+3));
for(i=2;i<k+2;i++){
myMat[i] = (int*) malloc(sizeof(int));
}
myMat[x][y] = dist;
myMat[y][x] = dist;
x=0; y=0;
}
return 0;
}
Upvotes: 0
Views: 1112
Reputation: 356
you allocate 1 char to city1 and city2 (malloc with sizeof(char)). Unless your cities all have just one character, the fscanf will go out of bounds.
Try again with city1 = (char*) malloc(1024) so a city can be a bit longer.
matnames is not very obvious what you want it to be, but you allocate it 1 sizeof(pointer), i.e. 4 bytes. Then you do matnames[0] = ..., matnames[1] = ... matnames[1] is already overflowing the memory you allocated. So you're writing in random places.
The C-language is very forgiving regarding memory allocations, but the results are completely unpredictable. Be sure your malloc enough space, and consider other languages when possible. :)
Upvotes: 1