last day (15 days later) » 

00:50
-1
Q: strcmp() only returns -1 0 and 1 no matter the input strings

anastaciuThough the comon sense and literature is clear about the behaviour of strcmp(). int strcmp( const char *lhs, const char *rhs ); Negative value if lhs appears before rhs in lexicographical order. Zero if lhs and rhs compare equal. Positive value if lhs appears after rhs in lexicogra...

Please post the code - as it is external to this site and may disappear in the future
You may have larger/smaller values depending on implementation: some may do something like that return a[last] - b[last]; where last is the last is the min length of the two string.
Your implementation may only return -1, 0, +1; that's valid. So is returning -25, 0, +37. As it happens, on my Mac (running macOS Mojave 10.14.6) and on a RHEL 5 machine (Linux 2.6.18-128.el5 #1 SMP), I do get 0 1 -1 from your code. But that result meets the requirements, but isn't guaranteed.
I've asserted the validity of the results in my question, but since it's not clearly sated that it's -1 0 or 1, wich I assume would be the case if the returns were always consistent, the doubt was raised.
Being >0 is not the same as being 1.
It is clearly stated in the standard (C11 §7.24.4.2 The strcmp function): The strcmp function returns an integer greater than, equal to, or less than zero, accordingly as the string pointed to by s1 is greater than, equal to, or less than the string pointed to by s2. . It doesn't say how much greater than or less than zero the result must be.
00:50
The Cliff's Notes version of how to think about it is this (1) if the return is negative, the parameter on the left sorts before the one on the right; (2) if zero they are equal; and (3) if positive, the parameter on the right sorts before the one on the left.
Why do you expect anything that isn't in the specification?
I appreciate you comments, My question is if it's >0, why can I not get a return of 2 for instance? Or if it's always 1 why it's not defined like that in the manuals.
Having a function return -1 0 and 1 makes it's usage different of having it return <0 0 or >0.
The spec says it only has to be greater than 1 - so could return 453453 or 9993 ....
Just use the spec. i.e ==0 or >0 or < 0 for the problem in hand
@EdHeal, if you could answer by showing an example I would be greatly appreciated.
It depends on the implementation of strcmp.
00:50
I don't understand your confusion, -1 is less than 0 and 1 is greater than 0. That conforms to the standard specification. The standard doesn't require it return -1 and 1 so you can't portably assert those are the only valid return values. There's a difference between standard-compliant portable code and "works on my machine".
@EdHeal that is not an example.
I could write an implementation of strcmp and generate zero if two strings are equal. Otherwise generate a randome positive or negative number as appropriate
@Blastfurnace It's not confusion, it's curiosity, being >0 is different than being 1 is it not?
Your implemention just generates those three values. Other implementations do no have to. But still will be a valid implementation
The key observation is that the standard encourages you to compare with zero. You can compare with <= -1 instead of < 0, or with >= +1 instead of > 0, but what you cannot do reliably is compare == -1 or == +1 as that won't work everywhere, even if you've not got a machine where it matters at the moment.
00:50
42 is also greater than 0 and an implementation that returned 42 is also standard-compliant. I don't understand what your point is.
The question is, can you show me an instance where the library function strcmp() returns a result other than -1 0 or 1? That is the original question.
If you want to know why your implementation of strcmp returns only -1, 0, or 1 (apparently), look at the code or ask the author. The author's job was a to write a standard-compliant implementation, and that's exactly what he/she did. Returning 1 instead of 75 or 83 is a completely arbitrary decision, just like I chose to wear a blue shirt today instead of a red shirt. Returning some kind of subtraction of the strings or some random value in the appropriate set only consumes more time and cycles. C is meant to be as fast as possible.
@yano the point of the question is to see if anyone here could explain why the results seem to be always -1 0 or 1, or if someone could show me an instance where that's not the case.
Here is a standard-compliant implementation that doesn't always return { -1, 0, 1 }
Because that's how the implementation was written. If you gave me the task "Write a program that outputs a number > 0", you won't know what my program will output until you see the code. Even if you run it you won't know what it will do every time. Have you tried every string? Maybe your strcmp implementation doesn't always return -1, 0, or 1.
haven't verified, but doesn't look like this will only return -1, 0, or 1: code.woboq.org/userspace/glibc/string/strcmp.c.html
00:50
@yano, I understand that, and it's the easiest way probably, however my question was to assert if that was allways the case.
I was hopping to see, not compliant implementations, but an actual complier that uses a library wirh that implementation, but I guess my question is broadly answered. Thank you all.

last day (15 days later) »