If I try something such as:
int anint;
char achar;
printf("\nEnter any integer:");
scanf("%d", &anint);
printf("\nEnter any character:");
scanf("%c", &achar);
printf("\nHello\n");
printf("\nThe integer entered is %d\n", anint);
printf("\nThe char entered is %c\n", achar);
It allows entering an integer, then skips the second scanf
completely, this is really strange, as when I swap the two (the char
scanf first), it works fine. What on earth could be wrong?
When reading input using scanf
, the input is read after the return key is pressed but the newline generated by the return key is not consumed by scanf
, which means the next time you read a char
from standard input there will be a newline ready to be read.
One way to avoid is to use fgets
to read the input as a string and then extract what you want using sscanf
as:
char line[MAX];
printf("\nEnter any integer:");
if( fgets(line,MAX,stdin) && sscanf(line,"%d", &anint)!=1 )
anint=0;
printf("\nEnter any character:");
if( fgets(line,MAX,stdin) && sscanf(line,"%c", &achar)!=1 )
achar=0;
Another way to consume the newline would be to scanf("%c%*c",&anint);
. The %*c
will read the newline from the buffer and discard it.
You might want to read this: