This is in C language. When I call rotate() in main, the function returns false for isalpha() even though the string entered for plaintext uses alphabetic characters. Perhaps it’s identifying an alphabetic character by its ASCII value (‘A’ = 65)? I tried to test that out and used (char) with the letter variable in rotate() but it didn’t change anything.

PORTION OF MAIN

string plaintext = get_string("plaintext:  ");

    int length = strlen(plaintext);
    char ciphertext[length];

    for (int i = 0; i < length; i++)
    {
        ciphertext[i] = rotate(plaintext[i], key);
    }

ROTATE FUNCTION

char rotate(char letter, int key)
{
    if (isalpha(letter) == true)
    { ...
  • @pHr34kY
    link
    151 year ago

    I would drop the “== true” entirely. C will evaluate any nonzero int as true in an “if” statement.