FLOATING NULL?
Wild Rider
robertsw at ...!asuvax!gtephx
Wed May 29 06:28:14 AEST 1991
In article <1991May28.153655.24199 at zoo.toronto.edu>
henry at zoo.toronto.edu (Henry Spencer) writes:
>In article <13223 at uhccux.uhcc.Hawaii.Edu> karl at wiliki.UUCP (Karl Ihrig) writes:
[ ... description of reading data from a spreadsheet file ... ]
>>...blank spots in my real world data. I am totally baffled. How do I
>>mark the float element of the array as null, blank, or not
>>available?
>
>There is no portable way except allocating a separate flag for each of
>your float values. C does not guarantee the existence of any "blank" value
>in floating point, and indeed a good many machines have no such special
>value. If you are willing to constrain your code to run on machines using
>IEEE floating point, you could use a NaN value... but there is no standard
>way of generating such a value or testing for it.
although henry did directly answer karl's question, perhaps karl
could do better by reevaluating what he's trying to do, i.e., is the
chosen data structure appropriate for a spreadsheet? since
spreadsheets usually resemble a sparse matrix, i would rather choose
something like:
typedef struct row {
int rowNum;
struct col * colPtr;
} Row;
typedef struct col {
int colNum;
float cellValue;
struct col * nextCol;
} Col;
...
Row * masterPtr = NULL;
...
>--
>"We're thinking about upgrading from | Henry Spencer @ U of Toronto Zoology
>SunOS 4.1.1 to SunOS 3.5." | henry at zoo.toronto.edu utzoo!henry
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ is that pronounced "SunToast" ? :-)
cheers,
wr (wild rider)
--
Wallace Roberts, AG (formerly GTE) Communication Systems, Phoenix, AZ
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