I seem to have a problem with a simple program that is supposed to count various character types in a file. It always prints zeroes even though the file is not empty at all. I think it has something to do with pointers, could be wrong. I would also like to know if initializing variables is necessary in this case?
// fun.h
void count_char(FILE *f, unsigned *newl, unsigned *let, unsigned *num, unsigned *spec_char);
// main.c
#include <stdio.h>
#include "fun.h"
int main()
{
unsigned newline = 0, number = 0, letter = 0, special_character = 0;
char path[256];
FILE *f_read;
printf("Insert a file path: ");
gets(path);
f_read = fopen(path, "r");
if(f_read == NULL)
{
perror("The following error occurred");
return 1;
}
count_char(f_read, &newline, &number, &letter, &special_character);
printf("File content:\n\tnewline - %u\n\tletters - %u\n\tnumbers - %u\n\tspecial characters - %u\n", newline, number, letter, special_character);
return 0;
}
// fun.c
#include <stdio.h>
#include <ctype.h>
void count_char(FILE *f, unsigned *newl, unsigned *let, unsigned *num, unsigned *spec_char)
{
char c;
while((c = fgetc(f)) != EOF)
{
if(c == '\n')
*newl++;
else if(isalpha(c))
*let++;
else if(isdigit(c))
*num++;
else
*spec_char++;
}
return;
}