This repository contains my solutions to the exercises from The C Programming Language by Brian Kernighan and Dennis Ritchie.
All files will either be from a commit that lists the exercise or will contain a comment detailing where the example was copied from. Some solutions are inspired by those found online, especially in the later chapters.
- Ex 1-1 (Pg 8) - Run the "hello world" program on your system. Experiment with leaving out parts of the program, to see what error messages you get.
- Ex 1-2 (Pg 8) - Experiment to find out what happens when
printf
's argument string contains\c
, where c is some character not listed above. - Ex 1-3 (Pg 13) - Modify the temperature conversion program to print a heading above the table. - Solution
- Ex 1-4 (Pg 13) - Write a program to print the corresponding Celsius to Fahrenheit table. - Solution
- Ex 1-5 (Pg 14) - Modify the temperature conversion program to print the table in reverse order, that is, from 300 degrees to 0. - Solution
- Ex 1-6 (Pg 17) - Verify that the expression
getchar() != EOF
is 0 or 1. - Ex 1-7 (Pg 17) - Write a program to print the value of
EOF
. - Solution - Ex 1-8 (Pg 20) - Write a program to count blanks, tabs, and newlines. - Solution
- Ex 1-9 (Pg 20) - Write a program to copy its input to its output, replacing each string of one or more blanks by a single blank. - Solution
- Ex 1-10 (Pg 20) - Write a program to copy its input to its output, replacing each tab by
\t
, each backspace by\b
, and each backslash by\\
. This makes tabs and backspaces visible in an unambiguous way. - Solution - Ex 1-11 (Pg 21) - How would you test the word count program? What kinds of input are most likely to uncover bugs if there are any?
- Ex 1-12 (Pg 21) - Write a program that prints its input one word per line. - Solution
- Ex 1-13 (Pg 24) - Write a program to print a histogram of the lengths of words in its input. It is easy to draw the histogram with the bars horizontal; a vertical orientation is more challenging. - Solution
- Ex 1-14 (Pg 24) - Write a program to print a histogram of the frequencies of different characters in its input. - Solution
- Ex 1-15 (Pg 27) - Rewrite the temperature conversion program of Section 1.2 to use a function for conversion. - Solution
- Ex 1-16 (Pg 30) - Revise the main routine of the longest-line program so it will correctly print the length of arbitrarily long input lines, and as much as possible of the text. - Solution
- Ex 1-17 (Pg 31) - Write a program to print all input lines that are longer than 80 characters. - Solution
- Ex 1-18 (Pg 31) - Write a program to remove all trailing blanks and tabs from each line of input, and to delete entirely blank lines. - Solution
- Ex 1-19 (Pg 31) - Write a function
reverse(s)
that reverses the character strings
. Use it to write a program that reverses its input a line at a time. - Solution - Ex 1-20 (Pg 34) - Write a program
detab
that replaces tabs in the input with the proper number of blanks to space to the next tab stop. Assume a fixed set of tab stops, say everyn
columns. Should n be a variable or a symbolic parameter? - Solution - Ex 1-21 (Pg 34) - Write a program
entab
that replaces strings of blanks with the minimum number of tabs and blanks to achieve the same spacing. Use the same stops as fordetab
. When either a tab or a single blank would suffice to reach a tab stop, which should be given preference? - Solution - Ex 1-22 (Pg 34) - Write a program to "fold" long input lines into two or more shorter lines after the last non-blank character that occurs before the n-th column of input. Make sure your program does something intelligent with very long lines, and if there are no blanks or tabs before the specified column. - Solution
- Ex 1-23 (Pg 34) - Write a program to remove all comments from a C program. Don't forget to handle quoted strings and character constants properly. C comments do not nest. - Solution
- Ex 1-24 (Pg 34) - Write a program to check a C program for rudimentary syntax errors like unbalanced parentheses, brackets and braces. Don't forget about quotes, both single and double, escape sequences, and comments. (This program is hard if you do it in full generality.) - Solution
- Ex 2-1 (Pg 36) - Write a program to determine the ranges of
char
,short
,int
, andlong
variables, bothsigned
andunsigned
, by printing appropriate values from standard headers and by direct computation. Harder if you compute them: determine the ranges of the various floating-point types. - Solution - Ex 2-2 (Pg 42) - Write a loop equivalent to the for loop above without using
&&
or||
. - Solution - Ex 2-3 (Pg 46) - Write the function
htoi(s)
, which converts a string of hexadecimal digits (including an optional0x
or0X
) into its equivalent integer value. The allowable digits are 0 through 9, a through f, and A through F. - Solution - Ex 2-4 (Pg 48) - Write an alternate version of
squeeze(s1,s2)
that deletes each character in the strings1
that matches any character in the strings2
. - Solution - Ex 2-5 (Pg 48) - Write the function
any(s1,s2)
, which returns the first location in the strings1
where any character from the strings2
occurs, or -1 ifs1
contains no characters froms2
. (The standard library functionstrpbrk
does the same job but returns a pointer to the location.) - Solution - Ex 2-6 (Pg 49) - Write a function
setbits(x,p,n,y)
that returnsx
with then
bits that begin at positionp
set to the rightmostn
bits ofy
, leaving the other bits unchanged. - Solution - Ex 2-7 (Pg 49) - Write a function
invert(x,p,n)
that returnsx
with then
bits that begin at positionp
inverted (i.e., 1 changed into 0 and vice versa), leaving the others unchanged. - Solution - Ex 2-8 (Pg 49) - Write a function
rightrot(x,n)
that returns the value of the integerx
rotated to the right byn
bit positions. - Solution - Ex 2-9 (Pg 51) - In a two's complement number system,
x &= (x-1)
deletes the rightmost 1-bit inx
. Explain why. Use this observation to write a faster version ofbitcount
. - Solution - Ex 2-10 (Pg 52) - Rewrite the function
lower
, which converts upper case letters to lower case, with a conditional expression instead of if-else. - Solution
- Ex 3-1 (Pg 58) - Our binary search makes two tests inside the loop, when one would suffice (at the price of more tests outside). Write a version with only one test inside the loop and measure the difference in run-time. - Solution
- Ex 3-2 (Pg 60) - Write a function
escape(s,t)
that converts characters like newline and tab into visible escape sequences like\n
and\t
as it copies the stringt
tos
. Use aswitch
. Write a function for the other direction as well, converting escape sequences into the real characters. - Solution - Ex 3-3 (Pg 63) - Write a function
expand(s1,s2)
that expands shorthand notations likea-z
in the strings1
into the equivalent complete listabc...xyz
ins2
. Allow for letters of either case and digits, and be prepared to handle cases likea-b-c
anda-z0-9
and-a-z
. Arrange that a leading or trailing - is taken literally. - Solution - Ex 3-4 (Pg 64) - In a two's complement number representation, our version of
itoa
does not handle the largest negative number, that is, the value ofn
equal to-(2 to the power (wordsize - 1))
. Explain why not. Modify it to print that value correctly regardless of the machine on which it runs. - Solution - Ex 3-5 (Pg 64) - Write the function
itob(n,s,b)
that converts the integern
into a baseb
character representation in the strings
. In particular,itob(n,s,16)
formatsn
as a hexadecimal integer ins
. - Solution - Ex 3-6 (Pg 64) - Write a version of
itoa
that accepts three arguments instead of two. The third argument is a minimum field width; the converted number must be padded with blanks on the left if necessary to make it wide enough. - Solution
- Ex 4-1 (Pg 71) - Write the function
strrindex(s,t)
, which returns the position of the rightmost occurrence oft
ins
, or -1 if there is none. - Solution - Ex 4-2 (Pg 73) - Extend
atof
to handle scientific notation of the form123.45e-6
where a floating-point number may be followed by e or E and an optionally signed exponent. - Solution - Ex 4-3 (Pg 79) - Given the basic framework, it's straightforward to extend the calculator. Add the modulus (
%
) operator and provisions for negative numbers. - Solution - Ex 4-4 (Pg 79) - Add commands to print the top element of the stack without popping, to duplicate it, and to swap the top two elements. Add a command to clear the stack. - Solution
- Ex 4-5 (Pg 79) - Add access to library functions like
sin
,exp
, andpow
. See<math.h>
in Appendix B, Section 4. - Solution - Ex 4-6 (Pg 79) - Add commands for handling variables. (It's easy to provide twenty-six variables with single-letter names.) Add a variable for the most recently printed value. - Solution
- Ex 4-7 (Pg 79) - Write a routine
ungets(s)
that will push back an entire string onto the input. Shouldungets
know aboutbuf
andbufp
, or should it just useungetch
? - Solution - Ex 4-8 (Pg 79) - Suppose that there will never be more than one character of pushback. Modify
getch
andungetch
accordingly. - Solution - Ex 4-9 (Pg 79) - Our
getch
andungetch
do not handle a pushed-backEOF
correctly. Decide what their properties ought to be if anEOF
is pushed back, then implement your design. - Solution - Ex 4-10 (Pg 79) - An alternate organization uses
getline
to read an entire input line; this makesgetch
andungetch
unnecessary. Revise the calculator to use this approach. - Solution - Ex 4-11 (Pg 83) - Modify
getop
so that it doesn't need to useungetch
. Hint: use an internal static variable. - Solution - Ex 4-12 (Pg 88) - Adapt the ideas of
printd
to write a recursive version ofitoa
; that is, convert an integer into a string by calling a recursive routine. - Solution - Ex 4-13 (Pg 88) - Write a recursive version of the function
reverse(s)
, which reverses the strings
in place. - Solution - Ex 4-14 (Pg 91) - Define a macro
swap(t,x,y)
that interchanges two arguments of typet
. (Block structure will help.) - Solution
- Ex 5-1 (Pg 97) - As written,
getint
treats a+
or-
not followed by a digit as a valid representation of zero. Fix it to push such a character back on the input. - Solution - Ex 5-2 (Pg 97) - Write
getfloat
, the floating-point analog ofgetint
. What type doesgetfloat
return as its function value? - Solution - Ex 5-3 (Pg 107) - Write a pointer version of the function
strcat
that we showed in Chapter 2:strcat(s,t)
copies the stringt
to the end ofs
. - Solution - Ex 5-4 (Pg 107) - Write the function
strend(s,t)
, which returns 1 if the stringt
occurs at the end of the strings
, and zero otherwise. - Solution - Ex 5-5 (Pg 107) - Write versions of the library functions
strncpy
,strncat
, andstrncmp
, which operate on at most the firstn
characters of their argument strings. For example,strncpy(s,t,n)
copies at mostn
characters oft
tos
. Full descriptions are in Appendix B. - Solution - Ex 5-6 (Pg 107) - Rewrite appropriate programs from earlier chapters and exercises with pointers instead of array indexing. Good possibilities include
getline
(Chapters 1 and 4),atoi
,itoa
, and their variants (Chapters 2, 3, and 4),reverse
(Chapter 3), andstrindex
andgetop
(Chapter 4). - Solution - Ex 5-7 (Pg 110) - Rewrite
readlines
to store lines in an array supplied bymain
, rather than callingalloc
to maintain storage. How much faster is the program? - Solution - Ex 5-8 (Pg 112) - There is no error-checking in
day_of_year
ormonth_day
. Remedy this defect. - Solution - Ex 5-9 (Pg 114) - Rewrite the routines
day_of_year
andmonth_day
with pointers instead of indexing. - Ex 5-10 (Pg 118) - Write the program
expr
, which evaluates a reverse Polish expression from the command line, where each operator or operand is a separate argument. For example,expr 2 3 4 + *
evaluates2 X (3+4)
. - Solution - Ex 5-11 (Pg 118) - Modify the programs
entab
anddetab
(written as exercises in Chapter 1) to accept a list of tab stops as arguments. Use the default tab settings if there are no arguments. - Solution: entab, detab - Ex 5-12 (Pg 118) - Extend
entab
anddetab
to accept the shorthandentab -m +n
to mean tab stops everyn
columns, starting at columnm
. Choose convenient (for the user) default behavior. - Solution: entab, detab - Ex 5-13 (Pg 118) - Write the program
tail
, which prints the lastn
lines of its input. By default,n
is 10, say, but it can be changed by an optional argument, so thattail -n
prints the lastn
lines. The program should behave rationally no matter how unreasonable the input or the value ofn
. Write the program so it makes the best use of available storage; lines should be stored as in the sorting program of Section 5.6, not in a two-dimensional array of fixed size. - Solution - Ex 5-14 (Pg 121) - Modify the sort program to handle a
-r
flag, which indicates sorting in reverse (decreasing) order. Be sure that-r
works with-n
. - Solution - Ex 5-15 (Pg 121) - Add the option
-f
to fold upper and lower case together, so that case distinctions are not made during sorting; for example,a
andA
compare equal. - Solution - Ex 5-16 (Pg 121) - Add the
-d
("directory order") option, which makes comparisons only on letters, numbers and blanks. Make sure it works in conjunction with-f
. - Solution - Ex 5-17 (Pg 121) - Add a field-handling capability, so sorting may be done on fields within lines, each field sorted according to an independent set of options. (The index for this book was sorted with
-df
for the index category and-n
for the page numbers.) - Solution - Ex 5-18 (Pg 126) - Make
dcl
recover from input errors. - Solution - Ex 5-19 (Pg 126) - Modify
undcl
so that it does not add redundant parentheses to declarations. - Solution - Ex 5-20 (Pg 126) - Expand
dcl
to handle declarations with function argument types, qualifiers likeconst
, and so on. - Solution
- Ex 6-1 (Pg 136) - Our version of
getword
does not properly handle underscores, string constants, comments, or preprocessor control lines. Write a better version. - Solution - Ex 6-2 (Pg 143) - Write a program that reads a C program and prints in alphabetical order each group of variable names that are identical in the first 6 characters but different somewhere thereafter. Don't count words within strings and comments. Make 6 a parameter that can be set from the command line. - Solution
- Ex 6-3 (Pg 143) - Write a cross-referencer that prints a list of all words in a document, and, for each word, a list of the line numbers on which it occurs. Remove noise words like "the," "and," and so on. - Solution
- Ex 6-4 (Pg 143) - Write a program that prints the distinct words in its input sorted into decreasing order of frequency of occurrence. Precede each word by its count. - Solution
- Ex 6-5 (Pg 145) - Write a function
undef
that will remove a name and definition from the table maintained bylookup
andinstall
. - Solution - Ex 6-6 (Pg 145) - Implement a simple version of the
#define
processor (i.e., no arguments) suitable for use with C programs, based on the routines of this section. You may also findgetch
andungetch
helpful. - Solution
- Ex 7-1 (Pg 153) - Write a program that converts upper case to lower or lower case to upper, depending on the name it is invoked with, as found in
argv[0]
. - Solution - Ex 7-2 (Pg 155) - Write a program that will print arbitrary input in a sensible way. As a minimum, it should print non-graphic characters in octal or hexadecimal according to local custom, and break long text lines. - Solution
- Ex 7-3 (Pg 156) - Revise
minprintf
to handle more of the facilities ofprintf
. - Solution - Ex 7-4 (Pg 159) - Write a private version of
scanf
analogous tominprintf
from the previous section. - Solution - Ex 7-5 (Pg 159) - Rewrite the postfix calculator of Chapter 4 to use
scanf
and/orsscanf
to do the input and number conversion. - Solution - Ex 7-6 (Pg 165) - Write a program to compare two files, printing the first line where they differ. - Solution
- Ex 7-7 (Pg 165) - Modify the pattern finding program of Chapter 5 to take its input from a set of named files or, if no files are named as arguments, from the standard input. Should the file name be printed when a matching line is found? - Solution
- Ex 7-8 (Pg 165) - Write a program to print a set of files, starting each new one on a new page, with a title and a running page count for each file. - Solution
- Ex 7-9 (Pg 168) - Functions like
isupper
can be implemented to save space or to save time. Explore both possibilities. - Solution
A majority of the solutions to this chapter are heavily inspired by other solutions found online.
- Ex 8-1 (Pg 174) - Rewrite the program
cat
from Chapter 7 usingread
,write
,open
andclose
instead of their standard library equivalents. Perform experiments to determine the relative speeds of the two versions. - Solution - Ex 8-2 (Pg 178) - Rewrite
fopen
and_fillbuf
with fields instead of explicit bit operations. Compare code size and execution speed. - Solution - Ex 8-3 (Pg 179) - Design and write
_flushbuf
,fflush
andfclose
. - Solution - Ex 8-4 (Pg 179) - The standard library function
int fseek(FILE *fp, long offset, int origin)
is identical tolseek
except thatfp
is a file pointer instead of a file descriptor and the return value is anint
status, not a position. Writefseek
. Make sure that yourfseek
coordinates properly with the buffering done for the other functions of the library. - Solution - Ex 8-5 (Pg 184) - Modify the
fsize
program to print the other information contained in the inode entry. - Solution - Ex 8-6 (Pg 189) - The standard library function
calloc(n,size)
returns a pointer ton
objects of sizesize
, with the storage initialized to zero. Writecalloc
, by callingmalloc
or by modifying it. - Solution - Ex 8-7 (Pg 189) -
malloc
accepts a size request without checking its plausibility;free
believes that the block it is asked to free contains a valid size field. Improve these routines so they take more pains with error checking. - Solution - Ex 8-8 (Pg 189) - Write a routine
bfree(p,n)
that will free an arbitrary blockp
ofn
characters into the free list maintained bymalloc
andfree
. By usingbfree
, a user can add a static or external array to the free list at any time. - Solution