memcmp
Defined in header <string.h>
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int memcmp( const void* lhs, const void* rhs, size_t count ); |
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Compares the first count
characters of the objects pointed to by lhs
and rhs
. The comparison is done lexicographically.
The sign of the result is the sign of the difference between the values of the first pair of bytes (both interpreted as unsigned char) that differ in the objects being compared.
The behavior is undefined if access occurs beyond the end of either object pointed to by lhs
and rhs
. The behavior is undefined if either lhs
or rhs
is a null pointer.
Parameters
lhs, rhs | - | pointers to the objects to compare |
count | - | number of bytes to examine |
Return value
Negative value if lhs
appears before rhs
in lexicographical order.
Zero if lhs
and rhs
compare equal, or if count is zero.
Positive value if lhs
appears after rhs
in lexicographical order.
Notes
This function reads object representations, not the object values, and is typically meaningful for byte arrays only: structs may have padding bytes whose values are indeterminate, the values of any bytes beyond the last stored member in a union are indeterminate, and a type may have two or more representations for the same value (different encodings for +0 and -0 or for +0.0 and 0.0, indeterminate padding bits within the type).
Example
#include <stdio.h> #include <string.h> void demo(const char* lhs, const char* rhs, size_t sz) { for(size_t n = 0; n < sz; ++n) putchar(lhs[n]); int rc = memcmp(lhs, rhs, sz); if(rc == 0) printf(" compares equal to "); else if(rc < 0) printf(" precedes "); else if(rc > 0) printf(" follows "); for(size_t n = 0; n < sz; ++n) putchar(rhs[n]); puts(" in lexicographical order"); } int main(void) { char a1[] = {'a','b','c'}; char a2[sizeof a1] = {'a','b','d'}; demo(a1, a2, sizeof a1); demo(a2, a1, sizeof a1); demo(a1, a1, sizeof a1); }
Output:
abc precedes abd in lexicographical order abd follows abc in lexicographical order abc compares equal to abc in lexicographical order
References
- C11 standard (ISO/IEC 9899:2011):
- 7.24.4.1 The memcmp function (p: 365)