C

C gets() & puts()

The gets() and puts() are declared in the header file stdio.h. Both the functions are involved in the input/output operations of the strings.

C gets() function

The gets() function enables the user to enter some characters followed by the enter key. All the characters entered by the user get stored in a character array. The null character is added to the array to make it a string. The gets() allows the user to enter the space-separated strings. It returns the string entered by the user.

Declaration

snippet
char[] gets(char[]);

Reading string using gets()

snippet
#include
void main ()
{
	char s[30];
	printf("Enter the string? ");
	gets(s);
	printf("You entered %s",s);
}

Output

Output
Enter the string? rookienerd is the best You entered rookienerd is the best

The gets() function is risky to use since it doesn't perform any array bound checking and keep reading the characters until the new line (enter) is encountered. It suffers from buffer overflow, which can be avoided by using fgets(). The fgets() makes sure that not more than the maximum limit of characters are read. Consider the following example.

snippet
#include
void main() 
{ 
   char str[20]; 
   printf("Enter the string? ");
   fgets(str, 20, stdin); 
   printf("%s", str); 
}

Output

Output
Enter the string? rookienerd is the best website rookienerd is the b

C puts() function

The puts() function is very much similar to printf() function. The puts() function is used to print the string on the console which is previously read by using gets() or scanf() function. The puts() function returns an integer value representing the number of characters being printed on the console. Since, it prints an additional newline character with the string, which moves the cursor to the new line on the console, the integer value returned by puts() will always be equal to the number of characters present in the string plus 1.

Declaration

snippet
int puts(char[])

Let's see an example to read a string using gets() and print it on the console using puts().

snippet
#include
#include   
int main(){  
char name[50];  
printf("Enter your name: ");  
gets(name); //reads string from user  
printf("Your name is: ");  
puts(name);  //displays string  
return 0;  
}

Output:

Output
Enter your name: Sonoo Jaiswal Your name is: Sonoo Jaiswal
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https://www.facebook.com/Rookie-Nerd-638990322793530 https://twitter.com/RookieNerdTutor https://plus.google.com/b/117136517396468545840 #
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