At the end of this project, you are expected to be able to explain to anyone, without the help of Google:
General
- What are pointers and how to use them
- What are arrays and how to use them
- What are the differences between pointers and arrays
- How to use strings and how to manipulate them
- Scope of variables
Write a function that takes a pointer to an int as parameter and updates the value it points to to 98.
- Prototype: void reset_to_98(int *n);
Write a function that swaps the values of two integers.
- Prototype: void swap_int(int *a, int *b);
Write a function that returns the length of a string.
- Prototype: int _strlen(char *s); FYI: The standard library provides a similar function: strlen. Run man strlen to learn more.
Write a function that prints a string, followed by a new line, to stdout.
- Prototype: void _puts(char *str); FYI: The standard library provides a similar function: puts. Run man puts to learn more.
Write a function that prints a string, in reverse, followed by a new line.
- Prototype: void print_rev(char *s);
Write a function that reverses a string.
- Prototype: void rev_string(char *s);
Write a function that prints every other character of a string, starting with the first character, followed by a new line.
- Prototype: void puts2(char *str);
Write a function that prints half of a string, followed by a new line.
- Prototype: void puts_half(char *str);
- The function should print the second half of the string
- If the number of characters is odd, the function should print the last n characters of the string, where n = (length_of_the_string - 1) / 2
Write a function that prints n elements of an array of integers, followed by a new line.
- Prototype: void print_array(int *a, int n);
- where n is the number of elements of the array to be printed
- Numbers must be separated by comma, followed by a space
- The numbers should be displayed in the same order as they are stored in the array
- You are allowed to use printf
Write a function that copies the string pointed to by src, including the terminating null byte (\0), to the buffer pointed to by dest.
- Prototype: char *_strcpy(char *dest, char *src);
- Return value: the pointer to dest FYI: The standard library provides a similar function: strcpy. Run man strcpy to learn more.
Write a function that convert a string to an integer.
- Prototype: int _atoi(char *s);
- The number in the string can be preceded by an infinite number of characters
- You need to take into account all the - and + signs before the number
- If there are no numbers in the string, the function must return 0
- You are not allowed to use long
- You are not allowed to declare new variables of “type” array
- You are not allowed to hard-code special values
- We will use the -fsanitize=signed-integer-overflow gcc flag to compile your code. FYI: The standard library provides a similar function: atoi. Run man atoi to learn more.
Create a program that generates random valid passwords for the program 101-crackme.
- You are allowed to use the standard library
- You don’t have to pass the betty-style tests (you still need to pass the betty-doc tests)
- man srand, rand, time
- gdb and objdump can help
1 Thessalonians 5:21