gcc compiles the following code without error. I’m creating a bubble sort function that can be used with arrays of any data type (hence the function pointer).
It sorts the array of character strings (arr2) without a problem, however, I can’t figure out why it won’t properly sort the array of integers (arr). I added a printf statement in the compare_long function to see what is going on. It doesn’t look like the integers are being passed to it properly. Any help will be greatly appreciated.
#include <stdio.h>
#include <string.h>
#define MAX_BUF 256
long arr[10] = { 3,6,1,2,3,8,4,1,7,2};
char arr2[5][20] = { "Mickey Mouse",
"Donald Duck",
"Minnie Mouse",
"Goofy",
"Pluto" };
void bubble(void *p, int width, int N, int(*fptr)(const void *, const void *));
int compare_string(const void *m, const void *n);
int compare_long(const void *m, const void *n);
int main(void) {
int i;
puts("\nBefore Sorting:\n");
for(i = 0; i < 10; i++) { /* show the long ints */
printf("%ld ",arr[i]);
}
puts("\n");
for(i = 0; i < 5; i++) { /* show the strings */
printf("%s\n", arr2[i]);
}
bubble(arr, 4, 10, compare_long); /* sort the longs */
bubble(arr2, 20, 5, compare_string); /* sort the strings */
puts("\n\nAfter Sorting:\n");
for(i = 0; i < 10; i++) { /* show the sorted longs */
printf("%d ",arr[i]);
}
puts("\n");
for(i = 0; i < 5; i++) { /* show the sorted strings */
printf("%s\n", arr2[i]);
}
return 0;
}
void bubble(void *p, int width, int N, int(*fptr)(const void *, const void *)) {
int i, j, k;
unsigned char buf[MAX_BUF];
unsigned char *bp = p;
for(i = N - 1; i >= 0; i--) {
for(j = 1; j <= i; j++) {
k = fptr((void *)(bp + width*(j-1)), (void *)(bp + j*width));
if(k > 0) {
memcpy(buf, bp + width*(j-1), width);
memcpy(bp + width*(j-1), bp + j*width , width);
memcpy(bp + j*width, buf, width);
}
}
}
}
int compare_string(const void *m, const void *n) {
char *m1 = (char *)m;
char *n1 = (char *)n;
return (strcmp(m1,n1));
}
int compare_long(const void *m, const void *n) {
long *m1, *n1;
m1 = (long *)m;
n1 = (long *)n;
printf("m1 = %l and n1 = %l\n", *m1, *n1);
return (*m1 > *n1);
}
The ANSI C spec defines long as a MINIMUM of 4 bytes (32 bits) but GCC is defining long as 8 bytes in your case. It is architecture-specific so you need to use sizeof(long) or one of the C99 types like uint32_t or int32_t if you want a specific size.