XIIIX
XIIIX

Reputation: 51

How to compare an ASCII value

I want to store the ASCII value of a letter into a variable, how can I do this?

for example :

r ASCII variable = 82
main()
{
    character = "character read from a file";
    variable= "r ascii"; //(in this case 82), the problem is that the letter is always        variable.;
    printf( "the value of %c is %d, character, variable)
}

How can I do this?

Also on an extra note, how could I read a .txt file character by character? so It could be saved on the character variable.

Upvotes: 3

Views: 78504

Answers (2)

bijin
bijin

Reputation: 31

If you just want to save the ascii value onto an integer variable

just use this

int b;
char c = 'r';
b = (int)c;
printf("%d",b);

Upvotes: 3

Pablo Santa Cruz
Pablo Santa Cruz

Reputation: 181380

Just do:

if (r == 82) {
   // provided r is a char or int variable
}

In C, char variables are represented by their ASCII integer value, so, if you have this:

char r;
r = 82;
if (r == 82) {
}

Is the same as:

char r;
r = 'R';
if (r == 'R') { // 'R' value is 82

} 

You can even mix them:

char r;
r = 82;
if (r == 'R') { // will be true

}

Upvotes: 14

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