'strcpy' with 'malloc'?

时光毁灭记忆、已成空白 提交于 2019-11-30 06:46:23

Your original code does not assign msg. Attempting to strcpy to it would be bad. You need to allocate some space before you strcpy into it. You could use malloc as you suggest or allocate space on the stack like this:

char msg[15];

If you malloc the memory you should remember to free it at some point. If you allocate on the stack the memory will be automatically returned to the stack when it goes out of scope (e.g. the function exits). In both cases you need to be careful to allocate enough to be able to copy the longest string into it. You might want to take a look at strncpy to avoid overflowing the array.

strdup does the malloc and strcpy for you

char *msg = strdup("hello world");

The first version is not safe. And, msg should be pointing to valid memory location for "Hello World!!!" to get copied.

char* msg = (char*)malloc(sizeof(char) * 15);
strcpy(msg, "Hello World!!!");
user411313

Use:

#define MYSTRDUP(str,lit) strcpy(str = malloc(strlen(lit)+1), lit)

And now it's easy and standard conforming:

char *s;
MYSTRDUP(s, "foo bar");

You need to allocate the space. Use malloc before the strcpy.

 char* msg;
 strcpy(msg, "Hello World!!!");  //<---------Ewwwww
 printf("%s\n", msg); 

This is UB. No second thoughts. msg is a wild pointer and trying to dereference it might cause segfault on your implementation.

msg to be pointing to a valid memory location large enough to hold "Hello World".

Try

char* msg = malloc(15);
strcpy(msg, "Hello World!!!");

or

char msg[20]; 
strcpy(msg, "Hello World!!!");
标签
易学教程内所有资源均来自网络或用户发布的内容,如有违反法律规定的内容欢迎反馈
该文章没有解决你所遇到的问题?点击提问,说说你的问题,让更多的人一起探讨吧!