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I have to write a program in which main calls other functions that test a series of number if any are less than a number, if all the series' numbers are between two limits, and if any are negative. My code returns the values of 1 for true and 0 for false, but the assignment asks that they be printed as 'true' or 'false'. I'm not sure how to get the bool answers to print as a string from printf. I used if (atl == false) printf("false"); in my at_least.c and in main.c, but it returns only a long string of true or false (ex: truetruetrue....). I'm not sure if that is the correct coding and I'm putting it in the wrong spot or there was some other code that I need to use.

This is my main.c:

#include "my.h"

int main (void)

{
    int     x;
    int     count    = 0;
    int     sum      = 0;
    double  average  = 0.0;
    int     largest  = INT_MIN;
    int     smallest = INT_MAX;
    bool    atlst    = false;
    bool    bet      = true;
    bool    neg      = false;
    int     end;

    while ((end = scanf("%d",&x)) != EOF)
        {
            sumall(x, &sum);                           //calling function sumall
            count++;
            larger_smaller(x, &largest, &smallest);    //calling function larger_smaller
            if (atlst == false)
               at_least(x, &atlst);                    //calling function at_least if x < 50
            if (bet == true)
               between(x, &bet);                       //calling function between if x is between 30 and 40 (inclusive)
            if (neg == false)
               negative(x, &neg);                      //calling function negative if x < 0
        }
    average = (double) sum / count;         
    print(count, sum, average, largest, smallest, atlst, bet, neg);
    return;
 }

my results for a set of numbers:

The number of integers is:           15
The sum is               :         3844
The average is           :       256.27
The largest is           :          987
The smallest is          :          -28
At least one is <  50    :            1     //This needs to be true
All between  30 and  40  :            0     //This needs to be false
At least one is negative :            1     //This needs to be true

This is in C, which I can't seem to find much on.

Thanks in advance for your help!

ADDENDUM:

This is repeated from an answer below.

This worked for the at_least and negative functions, but not for the between function. I have

void between(int x, bool* bet) 
  { 
    if (x >= LOWER && x <= UPPER) 
        *bet = false; 
    return; 
  }

as my code. I'm not sure what's wrong.

Thanks again!

share|improve this question
Just a side note, x == true is redundant in a Boolean expression; you can just say x. Similarly, x == false is just !x. – Jon Purdy Oct 1 '11 at 20:57

4 Answers

up vote 11 down vote accepted

You could use C's conditional (or ternary) operator :

  (a > b) ? "True" : "False";

or perhaps in your case:

  x ? "True" : "False" ;
share|improve this answer
This worked for the at_least and negative functions, but not for the between function. I have void between(int x, bool* bet) { if (x >= LOWER && x <= UPPER) *bet = false; return; } as my code. I'm not sure what's wrong. – Piseagan Oct 1 '11 at 20:28

Alternate branchless version:

"false\0true"+6*x
share|improve this answer
Very unreadable though. But nice solution otherwise. – DeCaf Oct 1 '11 at 14:49
7  
An inline function or macro with a self-documenting name (e.g. bool2str) would fix that. – R.. Oct 1 '11 at 15:07
Very true indeed. :) – DeCaf Oct 1 '11 at 17:38

x ? "true" : "false"

The above expression returns a char *, thus you can use like this:

puts(x ? "true" : "false"); or printf(" ... %s ... ", x ? "true" : "false");

You may want to make a macro for this.

share|improve this answer
Technically it's a const char*, not a char* (though there is a deprecated conversion from the former to the latter), but that's irrelevant here. – Adam Rosenfield Oct 1 '11 at 1:23
There's no point in creating a macro when an inline function can do the job. – kevin cline Oct 1 '11 at 1:49
2  
No, it's char *. This is C not C++. – R.. Oct 1 '11 at 4:44

So what about this one:

#include <stdio.h>

#define BOOL_FMT(bool_expr) "%s=%s\n", #bool_expr, (bool_expr) ? "true" : "false"

int main(int iArgC, char ** ppszArgV)
{
    int x = 0;
    printf(BOOL_FMT(x));

    int y = 1;
    printf(BOOL_FMT(y));

    return 0;
}

This prints out the following:

x=false
y=true

Using this with type bool but int should work the same way.

share|improve this answer
You probably want to add the printf call into the macro. Although because of how the comma operator works, you can use extra parentheses to do stuff like puts((BOOL_FMT(1))) to print true. – Oscar Korz Oct 1 '11 at 17:27

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