How to compare a stringHow to split in stringHow to get string parts from string?How to writte simple string compare?I2C_Anything String / Char Array issuesHow to clear of contents of string in Arduino?How to convert String to Double?WebSocket client for ArduinoHttpClient conditional if with readString() incoming data bufferSending a string to arduino and is not reacting to itHow to compare two string?String compare when using Serial

Implication of namely

Does the feature within Tides of Chaos bypass the limitation of 1/day?

Finitely generated matrix groups whose eigenvalues are all algebraic

When handwriting 黄 (huáng; yellow) is it incorrect to have a disconnected 草 (cǎo; grass) radical on top?

GFCI outlets - can they be repaired? Are they really needed at the end of a circuit?

Check if a point is right or left of another one in TikZ

Can compressed videos be decoded back to their uncompresed original format?

Is it possible to create a QR code using text?

Obtaining database information and values in extended properties

OP Amp not amplifying audio signal

Different meanings of こわい

Why do I get negative height?

In Bayesian inference, why are some terms dropped from the posterior predictive?

Did 'Cinema Songs' exist during Hiranyakshipu's time?

How to travel to Japan while expressing milk?

Machine learning testing data

How obscure is the use of 令 in 令和?

Should I tell management that I intend to leave due to bad software development practices?

How does a dynamic QR code work?

How dangerous is XSS

Knowledge-based authentication using Domain-driven Design in C#

Does Dispel Magic work on Tiny Hut?

How can I deal with my CEO asking me to hire someone with a higher salary than me, a co-founder?

Sums of two squares in arithmetic progressions



How to compare a string


How to split in stringHow to get string parts from string?How to writte simple string compare?I2C_Anything String / Char Array issuesHow to clear of contents of string in Arduino?How to convert String to Double?WebSocket client for ArduinoHttpClient conditional if with readString() incoming data bufferSending a string to arduino and is not reacting to itHow to compare two string?String compare when using Serial













1















How to compare a string coming from serial monitor with some predefined text stored as a local variable?
if i say:



int led = 2;
String a = " abcds";
void setup()
Serial.begin(9600);


void loop(){
String b = Serial.read();
Serial.println(b);

if(b != a)
digitalWrite(2,LOW);

else

digitalWrite(2,HIGH);



just as an example, this code will not compile because on the serial i receive bytes and i want to compare with a string.
So my question is...
how should be done?



Thanks in advance !










share|improve this question







New contributor




Iulian Chirvasa is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.




















  • For which arduino board? Most of us try to avoid the String class for the arduino uno. As soon as a character is available, you add it to a buffer or to a String. Sometimes the data from the serial port is closed with a linefeed, then you can process the text in the buffer or in the String when a linefeed is read.

    – Jot
    4 hours ago















1















How to compare a string coming from serial monitor with some predefined text stored as a local variable?
if i say:



int led = 2;
String a = " abcds";
void setup()
Serial.begin(9600);


void loop(){
String b = Serial.read();
Serial.println(b);

if(b != a)
digitalWrite(2,LOW);

else

digitalWrite(2,HIGH);



just as an example, this code will not compile because on the serial i receive bytes and i want to compare with a string.
So my question is...
how should be done?



Thanks in advance !










share|improve this question







New contributor




Iulian Chirvasa is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.




















  • For which arduino board? Most of us try to avoid the String class for the arduino uno. As soon as a character is available, you add it to a buffer or to a String. Sometimes the data from the serial port is closed with a linefeed, then you can process the text in the buffer or in the String when a linefeed is read.

    – Jot
    4 hours ago













1












1








1








How to compare a string coming from serial monitor with some predefined text stored as a local variable?
if i say:



int led = 2;
String a = " abcds";
void setup()
Serial.begin(9600);


void loop(){
String b = Serial.read();
Serial.println(b);

if(b != a)
digitalWrite(2,LOW);

else

digitalWrite(2,HIGH);



just as an example, this code will not compile because on the serial i receive bytes and i want to compare with a string.
So my question is...
how should be done?



Thanks in advance !










share|improve this question







New contributor




Iulian Chirvasa is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.












How to compare a string coming from serial monitor with some predefined text stored as a local variable?
if i say:



int led = 2;
String a = " abcds";
void setup()
Serial.begin(9600);


void loop(){
String b = Serial.read();
Serial.println(b);

if(b != a)
digitalWrite(2,LOW);

else

digitalWrite(2,HIGH);



just as an example, this code will not compile because on the serial i receive bytes and i want to compare with a string.
So my question is...
how should be done?



Thanks in advance !







string






share|improve this question







New contributor




Iulian Chirvasa is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











share|improve this question







New contributor




Iulian Chirvasa is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









share|improve this question




share|improve this question






New contributor




Iulian Chirvasa is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









asked 5 hours ago









Iulian ChirvasaIulian Chirvasa

82




82




New contributor




Iulian Chirvasa is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.





New contributor





Iulian Chirvasa is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.






Iulian Chirvasa is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.












  • For which arduino board? Most of us try to avoid the String class for the arduino uno. As soon as a character is available, you add it to a buffer or to a String. Sometimes the data from the serial port is closed with a linefeed, then you can process the text in the buffer or in the String when a linefeed is read.

    – Jot
    4 hours ago

















  • For which arduino board? Most of us try to avoid the String class for the arduino uno. As soon as a character is available, you add it to a buffer or to a String. Sometimes the data from the serial port is closed with a linefeed, then you can process the text in the buffer or in the String when a linefeed is read.

    – Jot
    4 hours ago
















For which arduino board? Most of us try to avoid the String class for the arduino uno. As soon as a character is available, you add it to a buffer or to a String. Sometimes the data from the serial port is closed with a linefeed, then you can process the text in the buffer or in the String when a linefeed is read.

– Jot
4 hours ago





For which arduino board? Most of us try to avoid the String class for the arduino uno. As soon as a character is available, you add it to a buffer or to a String. Sometimes the data from the serial port is closed with a linefeed, then you can process the text in the buffer or in the String when a linefeed is read.

– Jot
4 hours ago










4 Answers
4






active

oldest

votes


















1














If you do a Google search on "Arduino String" you should find a class reference on the String class. https://www.arduino.cc/reference/en/language/variables/data-types/stringobject/



It has a function compareTo() that should do what you need.






share|improve this answer






























    1














    C has strcmp() function that is used to compare two strings. It will return zero if two strings are equal non zero when not.






    share|improve this answer








    New contributor




    Vaibhav is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
    Check out our Code of Conduct.




















    • I started to suggest the same thing, and then noticed that the OP is using Arduino String objects, not C strings.

      – Duncan C
      3 hours ago


















    1














    version using String (not recommended)



    #define LED 2
    const char* a = "abcd";

    void setup()
    Serial.begin(115200);
    pinMode(LED, OUTPUT);


    void loop()
    if (Serial.available())
    String s = Serial.readStringUntil('n');
    s.trim();
    if (s == a)
    digitalWrite(LED, HIGH);
    else
    digitalWrite(LED, LOW);





    the version with C-string:



    #define LED 2
    const char* a = "abcd";
    char buffer[32];

    void setup()
    Serial.begin(115200);
    pinMode(LED, OUTPUT);


    void loop()
    if (Serial.available())
    size_t l = Serial.readBytesUntil('n', buffer, sizeof(buffer - 1));
    if (buffer[l - 1] == 'r')
    l--;

    buffer[l] = 0; // the terminating zero
    Serial.println(buffer);
    if (strcmp(buffer, a) == 0)
    digitalWrite(LED, HIGH);
    else
    digitalWrite(LED, LOW);








    share|improve this answer























    • As I already commented on VE7JRO's post, Stream::readBytesUntil() will wait for the terminating character until it gets it or it times out, which can lead to long delays during which the sketch is unresponsive. A better solution is to read only whatever is available, and process the buffer when an LF is read. C.f. the blog post Reading Serial on the Arduino, by Majenko, for a better solution.

      – Edgar Bonet
      2 hours ago











    • The String version works perfectly, but I can't get the C-string version to work. For me, the serial monitor shows "abcd" written out to 2 lines: line 1 prints "ab", line 2 prints "cd". Perhaps it's the old version of the IDE I'm using (1.0.6.2). I like that you provided 2 example sketches so the OP can see the difference in compile size: String 4364 bytes VS C-string 2746 bytes.

      – VE7JRO
      1 hour ago


















    0














    Here is a test sketch that uses a char array VS the String object. Please remember to set the serial monitor to send a newline only.



    char inputBuffer[16];
    char compareToThisString[] = "test string";

    void setup()
    Serial.begin(9600);


    void loop()

    if(Serial.available() > 0)

    Serial.readBytesUntil('n', inputBuffer, 16);

    if(strcmp(compareToThisString, inputBuffer) == 0)
    Serial.println("Matches");

    else
    Serial.println("No Match");


    memset(inputBuffer, 0, sizeof(inputBuffer));



    As Egar Bonet mentions in his comments, there is a (up to) one second delay before Serial.readBytesUntil() terminates. That does not apply to the sketch I've written because the function terminates as soon as it receives the n character. Serial.readBytesUntil() is blocking code, but that is a different matter which may or may not be an issue for you, depending on what you're building and how much data you are sending. To reduce the timeout period, there is a Serial.setTimeout() function which could be set to whatever you want, but it only comes into play if you don't send the n character.






    share|improve this answer

























    • why the memset?

      – Juraj
      2 hours ago






    • 1





      read max 15 to have one zero left in the array

      – Juraj
      2 hours ago











    • I'm using memset() to "zero out" the input buffer after each use. Without memset(), if you type in the correct string, it matches. If you then type in just the first 4 letter of the string, it matches which is incorrect. Using memset() only cost an extra 10 bytes compile size.

      – VE7JRO
      2 hours ago











    • Stream::readBytesUntil() will wait for the terminating character until it gets it or it times out, which can lead to long delays during which the sketch is unresponsive. A better solution is to read only whatever is available, and process the buffer when an LF is read. C.f. the blog post Reading Serial on the Arduino, by Majenko, for a better solution.

      – Edgar Bonet
      2 hours ago











    • "read max 15 to have one zero left in the array". I just tried it, and it doesn't work :( Replacing memset() with this: inputBuffer[0] = ''; doesn't work either.

      – VE7JRO
      2 hours ago











    Your Answer






    StackExchange.ifUsing("editor", function ()
    return StackExchange.using("schematics", function ()
    StackExchange.schematics.init();
    );
    , "cicuitlab");

    StackExchange.ready(function()
    var channelOptions =
    tags: "".split(" "),
    id: "540"
    ;
    initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);

    StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function()
    // Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
    if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled)
    StackExchange.using("snippets", function()
    createEditor();
    );

    else
    createEditor();

    );

    function createEditor()
    StackExchange.prepareEditor(
    heartbeatType: 'answer',
    autoActivateHeartbeat: false,
    convertImagesToLinks: false,
    noModals: true,
    showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
    reputationToPostImages: null,
    bindNavPrevention: true,
    postfix: "",
    imageUploader:
    brandingHtml: "Powered by u003ca class="icon-imgur-white" href="https://imgur.com/"u003eu003c/au003e",
    contentPolicyHtml: "User contributions licensed under u003ca href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/"u003ecc by-sa 3.0 with attribution requiredu003c/au003e u003ca href="https://stackoverflow.com/legal/content-policy"u003e(content policy)u003c/au003e",
    allowUrls: true
    ,
    onDemand: true,
    discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
    ,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
    );



    );






    Iulian Chirvasa is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.









    draft saved

    draft discarded


















    StackExchange.ready(
    function ()
    StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2farduino.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f63106%2fhow-to-compare-a-string%23new-answer', 'question_page');

    );

    Post as a guest















    Required, but never shown

























    4 Answers
    4






    active

    oldest

    votes








    4 Answers
    4






    active

    oldest

    votes









    active

    oldest

    votes






    active

    oldest

    votes









    1














    If you do a Google search on "Arduino String" you should find a class reference on the String class. https://www.arduino.cc/reference/en/language/variables/data-types/stringobject/



    It has a function compareTo() that should do what you need.






    share|improve this answer



























      1














      If you do a Google search on "Arduino String" you should find a class reference on the String class. https://www.arduino.cc/reference/en/language/variables/data-types/stringobject/



      It has a function compareTo() that should do what you need.






      share|improve this answer

























        1












        1








        1







        If you do a Google search on "Arduino String" you should find a class reference on the String class. https://www.arduino.cc/reference/en/language/variables/data-types/stringobject/



        It has a function compareTo() that should do what you need.






        share|improve this answer













        If you do a Google search on "Arduino String" you should find a class reference on the String class. https://www.arduino.cc/reference/en/language/variables/data-types/stringobject/



        It has a function compareTo() that should do what you need.







        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered 5 hours ago









        Duncan CDuncan C

        1,9601618




        1,9601618





















            1














            C has strcmp() function that is used to compare two strings. It will return zero if two strings are equal non zero when not.






            share|improve this answer








            New contributor




            Vaibhav is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
            Check out our Code of Conduct.




















            • I started to suggest the same thing, and then noticed that the OP is using Arduino String objects, not C strings.

              – Duncan C
              3 hours ago















            1














            C has strcmp() function that is used to compare two strings. It will return zero if two strings are equal non zero when not.






            share|improve this answer








            New contributor




            Vaibhav is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
            Check out our Code of Conduct.




















            • I started to suggest the same thing, and then noticed that the OP is using Arduino String objects, not C strings.

              – Duncan C
              3 hours ago













            1












            1








            1







            C has strcmp() function that is used to compare two strings. It will return zero if two strings are equal non zero when not.






            share|improve this answer








            New contributor




            Vaibhav is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
            Check out our Code of Conduct.










            C has strcmp() function that is used to compare two strings. It will return zero if two strings are equal non zero when not.







            share|improve this answer








            New contributor




            Vaibhav is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
            Check out our Code of Conduct.









            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer






            New contributor




            Vaibhav is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
            Check out our Code of Conduct.









            answered 4 hours ago









            VaibhavVaibhav

            592




            592




            New contributor




            Vaibhav is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
            Check out our Code of Conduct.





            New contributor





            Vaibhav is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
            Check out our Code of Conduct.






            Vaibhav is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
            Check out our Code of Conduct.












            • I started to suggest the same thing, and then noticed that the OP is using Arduino String objects, not C strings.

              – Duncan C
              3 hours ago

















            • I started to suggest the same thing, and then noticed that the OP is using Arduino String objects, not C strings.

              – Duncan C
              3 hours ago
















            I started to suggest the same thing, and then noticed that the OP is using Arduino String objects, not C strings.

            – Duncan C
            3 hours ago





            I started to suggest the same thing, and then noticed that the OP is using Arduino String objects, not C strings.

            – Duncan C
            3 hours ago











            1














            version using String (not recommended)



            #define LED 2
            const char* a = "abcd";

            void setup()
            Serial.begin(115200);
            pinMode(LED, OUTPUT);


            void loop()
            if (Serial.available())
            String s = Serial.readStringUntil('n');
            s.trim();
            if (s == a)
            digitalWrite(LED, HIGH);
            else
            digitalWrite(LED, LOW);





            the version with C-string:



            #define LED 2
            const char* a = "abcd";
            char buffer[32];

            void setup()
            Serial.begin(115200);
            pinMode(LED, OUTPUT);


            void loop()
            if (Serial.available())
            size_t l = Serial.readBytesUntil('n', buffer, sizeof(buffer - 1));
            if (buffer[l - 1] == 'r')
            l--;

            buffer[l] = 0; // the terminating zero
            Serial.println(buffer);
            if (strcmp(buffer, a) == 0)
            digitalWrite(LED, HIGH);
            else
            digitalWrite(LED, LOW);








            share|improve this answer























            • As I already commented on VE7JRO's post, Stream::readBytesUntil() will wait for the terminating character until it gets it or it times out, which can lead to long delays during which the sketch is unresponsive. A better solution is to read only whatever is available, and process the buffer when an LF is read. C.f. the blog post Reading Serial on the Arduino, by Majenko, for a better solution.

              – Edgar Bonet
              2 hours ago











            • The String version works perfectly, but I can't get the C-string version to work. For me, the serial monitor shows "abcd" written out to 2 lines: line 1 prints "ab", line 2 prints "cd". Perhaps it's the old version of the IDE I'm using (1.0.6.2). I like that you provided 2 example sketches so the OP can see the difference in compile size: String 4364 bytes VS C-string 2746 bytes.

              – VE7JRO
              1 hour ago















            1














            version using String (not recommended)



            #define LED 2
            const char* a = "abcd";

            void setup()
            Serial.begin(115200);
            pinMode(LED, OUTPUT);


            void loop()
            if (Serial.available())
            String s = Serial.readStringUntil('n');
            s.trim();
            if (s == a)
            digitalWrite(LED, HIGH);
            else
            digitalWrite(LED, LOW);





            the version with C-string:



            #define LED 2
            const char* a = "abcd";
            char buffer[32];

            void setup()
            Serial.begin(115200);
            pinMode(LED, OUTPUT);


            void loop()
            if (Serial.available())
            size_t l = Serial.readBytesUntil('n', buffer, sizeof(buffer - 1));
            if (buffer[l - 1] == 'r')
            l--;

            buffer[l] = 0; // the terminating zero
            Serial.println(buffer);
            if (strcmp(buffer, a) == 0)
            digitalWrite(LED, HIGH);
            else
            digitalWrite(LED, LOW);








            share|improve this answer























            • As I already commented on VE7JRO's post, Stream::readBytesUntil() will wait for the terminating character until it gets it or it times out, which can lead to long delays during which the sketch is unresponsive. A better solution is to read only whatever is available, and process the buffer when an LF is read. C.f. the blog post Reading Serial on the Arduino, by Majenko, for a better solution.

              – Edgar Bonet
              2 hours ago











            • The String version works perfectly, but I can't get the C-string version to work. For me, the serial monitor shows "abcd" written out to 2 lines: line 1 prints "ab", line 2 prints "cd". Perhaps it's the old version of the IDE I'm using (1.0.6.2). I like that you provided 2 example sketches so the OP can see the difference in compile size: String 4364 bytes VS C-string 2746 bytes.

              – VE7JRO
              1 hour ago













            1












            1








            1







            version using String (not recommended)



            #define LED 2
            const char* a = "abcd";

            void setup()
            Serial.begin(115200);
            pinMode(LED, OUTPUT);


            void loop()
            if (Serial.available())
            String s = Serial.readStringUntil('n');
            s.trim();
            if (s == a)
            digitalWrite(LED, HIGH);
            else
            digitalWrite(LED, LOW);





            the version with C-string:



            #define LED 2
            const char* a = "abcd";
            char buffer[32];

            void setup()
            Serial.begin(115200);
            pinMode(LED, OUTPUT);


            void loop()
            if (Serial.available())
            size_t l = Serial.readBytesUntil('n', buffer, sizeof(buffer - 1));
            if (buffer[l - 1] == 'r')
            l--;

            buffer[l] = 0; // the terminating zero
            Serial.println(buffer);
            if (strcmp(buffer, a) == 0)
            digitalWrite(LED, HIGH);
            else
            digitalWrite(LED, LOW);








            share|improve this answer













            version using String (not recommended)



            #define LED 2
            const char* a = "abcd";

            void setup()
            Serial.begin(115200);
            pinMode(LED, OUTPUT);


            void loop()
            if (Serial.available())
            String s = Serial.readStringUntil('n');
            s.trim();
            if (s == a)
            digitalWrite(LED, HIGH);
            else
            digitalWrite(LED, LOW);





            the version with C-string:



            #define LED 2
            const char* a = "abcd";
            char buffer[32];

            void setup()
            Serial.begin(115200);
            pinMode(LED, OUTPUT);


            void loop()
            if (Serial.available())
            size_t l = Serial.readBytesUntil('n', buffer, sizeof(buffer - 1));
            if (buffer[l - 1] == 'r')
            l--;

            buffer[l] = 0; // the terminating zero
            Serial.println(buffer);
            if (strcmp(buffer, a) == 0)
            digitalWrite(LED, HIGH);
            else
            digitalWrite(LED, LOW);









            share|improve this answer












            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer










            answered 2 hours ago









            JurajJuraj

            8,19621128




            8,19621128












            • As I already commented on VE7JRO's post, Stream::readBytesUntil() will wait for the terminating character until it gets it or it times out, which can lead to long delays during which the sketch is unresponsive. A better solution is to read only whatever is available, and process the buffer when an LF is read. C.f. the blog post Reading Serial on the Arduino, by Majenko, for a better solution.

              – Edgar Bonet
              2 hours ago











            • The String version works perfectly, but I can't get the C-string version to work. For me, the serial monitor shows "abcd" written out to 2 lines: line 1 prints "ab", line 2 prints "cd". Perhaps it's the old version of the IDE I'm using (1.0.6.2). I like that you provided 2 example sketches so the OP can see the difference in compile size: String 4364 bytes VS C-string 2746 bytes.

              – VE7JRO
              1 hour ago

















            • As I already commented on VE7JRO's post, Stream::readBytesUntil() will wait for the terminating character until it gets it or it times out, which can lead to long delays during which the sketch is unresponsive. A better solution is to read only whatever is available, and process the buffer when an LF is read. C.f. the blog post Reading Serial on the Arduino, by Majenko, for a better solution.

              – Edgar Bonet
              2 hours ago











            • The String version works perfectly, but I can't get the C-string version to work. For me, the serial monitor shows "abcd" written out to 2 lines: line 1 prints "ab", line 2 prints "cd". Perhaps it's the old version of the IDE I'm using (1.0.6.2). I like that you provided 2 example sketches so the OP can see the difference in compile size: String 4364 bytes VS C-string 2746 bytes.

              – VE7JRO
              1 hour ago
















            As I already commented on VE7JRO's post, Stream::readBytesUntil() will wait for the terminating character until it gets it or it times out, which can lead to long delays during which the sketch is unresponsive. A better solution is to read only whatever is available, and process the buffer when an LF is read. C.f. the blog post Reading Serial on the Arduino, by Majenko, for a better solution.

            – Edgar Bonet
            2 hours ago





            As I already commented on VE7JRO's post, Stream::readBytesUntil() will wait for the terminating character until it gets it or it times out, which can lead to long delays during which the sketch is unresponsive. A better solution is to read only whatever is available, and process the buffer when an LF is read. C.f. the blog post Reading Serial on the Arduino, by Majenko, for a better solution.

            – Edgar Bonet
            2 hours ago













            The String version works perfectly, but I can't get the C-string version to work. For me, the serial monitor shows "abcd" written out to 2 lines: line 1 prints "ab", line 2 prints "cd". Perhaps it's the old version of the IDE I'm using (1.0.6.2). I like that you provided 2 example sketches so the OP can see the difference in compile size: String 4364 bytes VS C-string 2746 bytes.

            – VE7JRO
            1 hour ago





            The String version works perfectly, but I can't get the C-string version to work. For me, the serial monitor shows "abcd" written out to 2 lines: line 1 prints "ab", line 2 prints "cd". Perhaps it's the old version of the IDE I'm using (1.0.6.2). I like that you provided 2 example sketches so the OP can see the difference in compile size: String 4364 bytes VS C-string 2746 bytes.

            – VE7JRO
            1 hour ago











            0














            Here is a test sketch that uses a char array VS the String object. Please remember to set the serial monitor to send a newline only.



            char inputBuffer[16];
            char compareToThisString[] = "test string";

            void setup()
            Serial.begin(9600);


            void loop()

            if(Serial.available() > 0)

            Serial.readBytesUntil('n', inputBuffer, 16);

            if(strcmp(compareToThisString, inputBuffer) == 0)
            Serial.println("Matches");

            else
            Serial.println("No Match");


            memset(inputBuffer, 0, sizeof(inputBuffer));



            As Egar Bonet mentions in his comments, there is a (up to) one second delay before Serial.readBytesUntil() terminates. That does not apply to the sketch I've written because the function terminates as soon as it receives the n character. Serial.readBytesUntil() is blocking code, but that is a different matter which may or may not be an issue for you, depending on what you're building and how much data you are sending. To reduce the timeout period, there is a Serial.setTimeout() function which could be set to whatever you want, but it only comes into play if you don't send the n character.






            share|improve this answer

























            • why the memset?

              – Juraj
              2 hours ago






            • 1





              read max 15 to have one zero left in the array

              – Juraj
              2 hours ago











            • I'm using memset() to "zero out" the input buffer after each use. Without memset(), if you type in the correct string, it matches. If you then type in just the first 4 letter of the string, it matches which is incorrect. Using memset() only cost an extra 10 bytes compile size.

              – VE7JRO
              2 hours ago











            • Stream::readBytesUntil() will wait for the terminating character until it gets it or it times out, which can lead to long delays during which the sketch is unresponsive. A better solution is to read only whatever is available, and process the buffer when an LF is read. C.f. the blog post Reading Serial on the Arduino, by Majenko, for a better solution.

              – Edgar Bonet
              2 hours ago











            • "read max 15 to have one zero left in the array". I just tried it, and it doesn't work :( Replacing memset() with this: inputBuffer[0] = ''; doesn't work either.

              – VE7JRO
              2 hours ago















            0














            Here is a test sketch that uses a char array VS the String object. Please remember to set the serial monitor to send a newline only.



            char inputBuffer[16];
            char compareToThisString[] = "test string";

            void setup()
            Serial.begin(9600);


            void loop()

            if(Serial.available() > 0)

            Serial.readBytesUntil('n', inputBuffer, 16);

            if(strcmp(compareToThisString, inputBuffer) == 0)
            Serial.println("Matches");

            else
            Serial.println("No Match");


            memset(inputBuffer, 0, sizeof(inputBuffer));



            As Egar Bonet mentions in his comments, there is a (up to) one second delay before Serial.readBytesUntil() terminates. That does not apply to the sketch I've written because the function terminates as soon as it receives the n character. Serial.readBytesUntil() is blocking code, but that is a different matter which may or may not be an issue for you, depending on what you're building and how much data you are sending. To reduce the timeout period, there is a Serial.setTimeout() function which could be set to whatever you want, but it only comes into play if you don't send the n character.






            share|improve this answer

























            • why the memset?

              – Juraj
              2 hours ago






            • 1





              read max 15 to have one zero left in the array

              – Juraj
              2 hours ago











            • I'm using memset() to "zero out" the input buffer after each use. Without memset(), if you type in the correct string, it matches. If you then type in just the first 4 letter of the string, it matches which is incorrect. Using memset() only cost an extra 10 bytes compile size.

              – VE7JRO
              2 hours ago











            • Stream::readBytesUntil() will wait for the terminating character until it gets it or it times out, which can lead to long delays during which the sketch is unresponsive. A better solution is to read only whatever is available, and process the buffer when an LF is read. C.f. the blog post Reading Serial on the Arduino, by Majenko, for a better solution.

              – Edgar Bonet
              2 hours ago











            • "read max 15 to have one zero left in the array". I just tried it, and it doesn't work :( Replacing memset() with this: inputBuffer[0] = ''; doesn't work either.

              – VE7JRO
              2 hours ago













            0












            0








            0







            Here is a test sketch that uses a char array VS the String object. Please remember to set the serial monitor to send a newline only.



            char inputBuffer[16];
            char compareToThisString[] = "test string";

            void setup()
            Serial.begin(9600);


            void loop()

            if(Serial.available() > 0)

            Serial.readBytesUntil('n', inputBuffer, 16);

            if(strcmp(compareToThisString, inputBuffer) == 0)
            Serial.println("Matches");

            else
            Serial.println("No Match");


            memset(inputBuffer, 0, sizeof(inputBuffer));



            As Egar Bonet mentions in his comments, there is a (up to) one second delay before Serial.readBytesUntil() terminates. That does not apply to the sketch I've written because the function terminates as soon as it receives the n character. Serial.readBytesUntil() is blocking code, but that is a different matter which may or may not be an issue for you, depending on what you're building and how much data you are sending. To reduce the timeout period, there is a Serial.setTimeout() function which could be set to whatever you want, but it only comes into play if you don't send the n character.






            share|improve this answer















            Here is a test sketch that uses a char array VS the String object. Please remember to set the serial monitor to send a newline only.



            char inputBuffer[16];
            char compareToThisString[] = "test string";

            void setup()
            Serial.begin(9600);


            void loop()

            if(Serial.available() > 0)

            Serial.readBytesUntil('n', inputBuffer, 16);

            if(strcmp(compareToThisString, inputBuffer) == 0)
            Serial.println("Matches");

            else
            Serial.println("No Match");


            memset(inputBuffer, 0, sizeof(inputBuffer));



            As Egar Bonet mentions in his comments, there is a (up to) one second delay before Serial.readBytesUntil() terminates. That does not apply to the sketch I've written because the function terminates as soon as it receives the n character. Serial.readBytesUntil() is blocking code, but that is a different matter which may or may not be an issue for you, depending on what you're building and how much data you are sending. To reduce the timeout period, there is a Serial.setTimeout() function which could be set to whatever you want, but it only comes into play if you don't send the n character.







            share|improve this answer














            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer








            edited 1 hour ago

























            answered 2 hours ago









            VE7JROVE7JRO

            1,65151122




            1,65151122












            • why the memset?

              – Juraj
              2 hours ago






            • 1





              read max 15 to have one zero left in the array

              – Juraj
              2 hours ago











            • I'm using memset() to "zero out" the input buffer after each use. Without memset(), if you type in the correct string, it matches. If you then type in just the first 4 letter of the string, it matches which is incorrect. Using memset() only cost an extra 10 bytes compile size.

              – VE7JRO
              2 hours ago











            • Stream::readBytesUntil() will wait for the terminating character until it gets it or it times out, which can lead to long delays during which the sketch is unresponsive. A better solution is to read only whatever is available, and process the buffer when an LF is read. C.f. the blog post Reading Serial on the Arduino, by Majenko, for a better solution.

              – Edgar Bonet
              2 hours ago











            • "read max 15 to have one zero left in the array". I just tried it, and it doesn't work :( Replacing memset() with this: inputBuffer[0] = ''; doesn't work either.

              – VE7JRO
              2 hours ago

















            • why the memset?

              – Juraj
              2 hours ago






            • 1





              read max 15 to have one zero left in the array

              – Juraj
              2 hours ago











            • I'm using memset() to "zero out" the input buffer after each use. Without memset(), if you type in the correct string, it matches. If you then type in just the first 4 letter of the string, it matches which is incorrect. Using memset() only cost an extra 10 bytes compile size.

              – VE7JRO
              2 hours ago











            • Stream::readBytesUntil() will wait for the terminating character until it gets it or it times out, which can lead to long delays during which the sketch is unresponsive. A better solution is to read only whatever is available, and process the buffer when an LF is read. C.f. the blog post Reading Serial on the Arduino, by Majenko, for a better solution.

              – Edgar Bonet
              2 hours ago











            • "read max 15 to have one zero left in the array". I just tried it, and it doesn't work :( Replacing memset() with this: inputBuffer[0] = ''; doesn't work either.

              – VE7JRO
              2 hours ago
















            why the memset?

            – Juraj
            2 hours ago





            why the memset?

            – Juraj
            2 hours ago




            1




            1





            read max 15 to have one zero left in the array

            – Juraj
            2 hours ago





            read max 15 to have one zero left in the array

            – Juraj
            2 hours ago













            I'm using memset() to "zero out" the input buffer after each use. Without memset(), if you type in the correct string, it matches. If you then type in just the first 4 letter of the string, it matches which is incorrect. Using memset() only cost an extra 10 bytes compile size.

            – VE7JRO
            2 hours ago





            I'm using memset() to "zero out" the input buffer after each use. Without memset(), if you type in the correct string, it matches. If you then type in just the first 4 letter of the string, it matches which is incorrect. Using memset() only cost an extra 10 bytes compile size.

            – VE7JRO
            2 hours ago













            Stream::readBytesUntil() will wait for the terminating character until it gets it or it times out, which can lead to long delays during which the sketch is unresponsive. A better solution is to read only whatever is available, and process the buffer when an LF is read. C.f. the blog post Reading Serial on the Arduino, by Majenko, for a better solution.

            – Edgar Bonet
            2 hours ago





            Stream::readBytesUntil() will wait for the terminating character until it gets it or it times out, which can lead to long delays during which the sketch is unresponsive. A better solution is to read only whatever is available, and process the buffer when an LF is read. C.f. the blog post Reading Serial on the Arduino, by Majenko, for a better solution.

            – Edgar Bonet
            2 hours ago













            "read max 15 to have one zero left in the array". I just tried it, and it doesn't work :( Replacing memset() with this: inputBuffer[0] = ''; doesn't work either.

            – VE7JRO
            2 hours ago





            "read max 15 to have one zero left in the array". I just tried it, and it doesn't work :( Replacing memset() with this: inputBuffer[0] = ''; doesn't work either.

            – VE7JRO
            2 hours ago










            Iulian Chirvasa is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.









            draft saved

            draft discarded


















            Iulian Chirvasa is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.












            Iulian Chirvasa is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.











            Iulian Chirvasa is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.














            Thanks for contributing an answer to Arduino Stack Exchange!


            • Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!

            But avoid


            • Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.

            • Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.

            To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.




            draft saved


            draft discarded














            StackExchange.ready(
            function ()
            StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2farduino.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f63106%2fhow-to-compare-a-string%23new-answer', 'question_page');

            );

            Post as a guest















            Required, but never shown





















































            Required, but never shown














            Required, but never shown












            Required, but never shown







            Required, but never shown

































            Required, but never shown














            Required, but never shown












            Required, but never shown







            Required, but never shown







            Popular posts from this blog

            Isabella Eugénie Boyer Biographie | Références | Menu de navigationmodifiermodifier le codeComparator to Compute the Relative Value of a U.S. Dollar Amount – 1774 to Present.

            Join wedge with single bond in chemfigHow to make only one part of double bond bold with chemfig?Crossing bonds in chemfigjoining atoms in chemfig. Two adjacent molculesHow do I selectively change bond length in chemfig?Ugly bond joints in chemfigchemfig: reaction above arrowUsing the mhchem and chemfig packages in conjunctionBonding to specific element letter using chemfigResonance hybrids in chemfigScale chemfig molecule in beamer with tikzWhy does this chemfig bond with a hook start in the middle of the atom?

            Should we avoid writing fiction about historical events without extensive research?How do we write a story about genocide committed by a fascist government without falling into the “Nazi Germany” cliché?Researching sensitive subjectsShould I avoid “lecturing” my readers?Archetypical/popular historical fictionHow to write a “strong” passage?Will what worked 'back then' work today? (Novels)Historical Fiction: using you and thouHow do you make characters relatable if they exist in a completely different moral context?How do I write a MODERN combat/violence scene without being dry?Fictionizing firsthand accounts from history?Is it possible to narrate a novel in a faux-historical style without alienating the reader?