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  4. why strncpy not copy 4 character in c2 ?
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why strncpy not copy 4 character in c2 ?

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  • Christian EhrlicherC Christian Ehrlicher

    @Qt-embedded-developer said in why strncpy not copy 4 character in c2 ?:

    i want to know what is technical reason behind it.

    c2 is an uninitialized pointer - you have luck it doesn't crash at all.

    Maybe learning basic c(++) stuff would be a good start.

    Q Offline
    Q Offline
    Qt embedded developer
    wrote on last edited by
    #4

    @Christian-Ehrlicher i have edited the question. can you just let me know why what i expect not come in output.

    i have seen that when i use char array it show output what i expect. but why its not possible with char* ?

    JonBJ 1 Reply Last reply
    0
    • Q Qt embedded developer

      @Christian-Ehrlicher i have edited the question. can you just let me know why what i expect not come in output.

      i have seen that when i use char array it show output what i expect. but why its not possible with char* ?

      JonBJ Offline
      JonBJ Offline
      JonB
      wrote on last edited by JonB
      #5

      @Qt-embedded-developer
      Goodness, how does setting to c2 to NULL help? Do you not understand strncpy(), please read its documentation.....

      i have seen that when i use char array it show output what i expect. but why its not possible with char* ?

      Sorry, but you really need to read up on C basics....

      Further, you will see it does not put a terminating \0 into the destination area. If cout<<s2 prints something it would be hell followed by an unknown stream of random characters.....

      Q 2 Replies Last reply
      3
      • JonBJ JonB

        @Qt-embedded-developer
        Goodness, how does setting to c2 to NULL help? Do you not understand strncpy(), please read its documentation.....

        i have seen that when i use char array it show output what i expect. but why its not possible with char* ?

        Sorry, but you really need to read up on C basics....

        Further, you will see it does not put a terminating \0 into the destination area. If cout<<s2 prints something it would be hell followed by an unknown stream of random characters.....

        Q Offline
        Q Offline
        Qt embedded developer
        wrote on last edited by
        #6

        @JonB

        why this show correct output then ?

        char* c= "hello world",c2[10];
        memset(c2,0x00,sizeof(c2));
        strncpy(c2,c,4);

        cout<<c2;

        JonBJ 1 Reply Last reply
        0
        • Q Qt embedded developer

          @JonB

          why this show correct output then ?

          char* c= "hello world",c2[10];
          memset(c2,0x00,sizeof(c2));
          strncpy(c2,c,4);

          cout<<c2;

          JonBJ Offline
          JonBJ Offline
          JonB
          wrote on last edited by JonB
          #7

          @Qt-embedded-developer
          Precisely because that avoids all the faults previously mentioned in your code!

          char c2[10] allocates 10 bytes of storage which c2 "points to".

          char *c2 allocates no storage for c2 to point to. You would either need to malloc() space, or set c2 to point to, say, a char c3[10] which does allocate storage.

          You seem to think char c2[10] and char *c2 are "the same thing", which they are not.

          1 Reply Last reply
          2
          • JonBJ JonB

            @Qt-embedded-developer
            Goodness, how does setting to c2 to NULL help? Do you not understand strncpy(), please read its documentation.....

            i have seen that when i use char array it show output what i expect. but why its not possible with char* ?

            Sorry, but you really need to read up on C basics....

            Further, you will see it does not put a terminating \0 into the destination area. If cout<<s2 prints something it would be hell followed by an unknown stream of random characters.....

            Q Offline
            Q Offline
            Qt embedded developer
            wrote on last edited by
            #8

            @JonB can you give example to put \0 in above example code ?

            JonBJ 1 Reply Last reply
            0
            • Q Qt embedded developer

              @JonB can you give example to put \0 in above example code ?

              JonBJ Offline
              JonBJ Offline
              JonB
              wrote on last edited by JonB
              #9

              @Qt-embedded-developer
              I really, really should not have to do this....

              char *c = "hello world";
              char c2[10];
              strncpy(c2, c, 4);
              c2[4] = '\0';
              cout << c2 << endl;
              

              One further thing: these days, using C++ (and also Qt), you really should no longer need to use C library functions like strncpy() (or malloc()). There are better, safer ways to do that, e.g. using C++ std::string or Qt QString (and new for malloc()). Same with e.g. QByteArray instead of memcpy/set().

              Q 1 Reply Last reply
              1
              • JonBJ JonB

                @Qt-embedded-developer
                I really, really should not have to do this....

                char *c = "hello world";
                char c2[10];
                strncpy(c2, c, 4);
                c2[4] = '\0';
                cout << c2 << endl;
                

                One further thing: these days, using C++ (and also Qt), you really should no longer need to use C library functions like strncpy() (or malloc()). There are better, safer ways to do that, e.g. using C++ std::string or Qt QString (and new for malloc()). Same with e.g. QByteArray instead of memcpy/set().

                Q Offline
                Q Offline
                Qt embedded developer
                wrote on last edited by Qt embedded developer
                #10

                @JonB said in why strncpy not copy 4 character in c2 ?:

                char *c = "hello world";
                char c2[10];
                strncpy(c2, c, 4);
                c2[4] = '\0';
                cout << c2 << endl;

                sorry for not clearly say about code. i said about below code.

                can you just let me know what change in below code i need to do to add '\0'.

                char* c= "hello world",*c2;
                c2= NULL;
                memset(c2,0x00,sizeof(c2));
                strncpy(c2,c,4);

                JonBJ jsulmJ 2 Replies Last reply
                0
                • Q Qt embedded developer

                  @JonB said in why strncpy not copy 4 character in c2 ?:

                  char *c = "hello world";
                  char c2[10];
                  strncpy(c2, c, 4);
                  c2[4] = '\0';
                  cout << c2 << endl;

                  sorry for not clearly say about code. i said about below code.

                  can you just let me know what change in below code i need to do to add '\0'.

                  char* c= "hello world",*c2;
                  c2= NULL;
                  memset(c2,0x00,sizeof(c2));
                  strncpy(c2,c,4);

                  JonBJ Offline
                  JonBJ Offline
                  JonB
                  wrote on last edited by JonB
                  #11

                  @Qt-embedded-developer
                  No, I'm sorry, I have reached my limit as to what I consider suitable to write/explain for you on this Qt site. For your own good you need to (a) read up about basic C, (b) understand code and (c) write/adapt your own for really simple stuff instead of asking someone else to do it for you.

                  • You have ignored what I said about c2 = NULL, and any understanding of allocating space.
                  • You have not made any attempt to look at what I did write for you and plainly/easily apply it to your new case.
                  • You have written (copied?) memset(c2,0x00,sizeof(c2)); and not understood how that would affect any need to "add '\0'.".
                  1 Reply Last reply
                  7
                  • Q Qt embedded developer

                    @JonB said in why strncpy not copy 4 character in c2 ?:

                    char *c = "hello world";
                    char c2[10];
                    strncpy(c2, c, 4);
                    c2[4] = '\0';
                    cout << c2 << endl;

                    sorry for not clearly say about code. i said about below code.

                    can you just let me know what change in below code i need to do to add '\0'.

                    char* c= "hello world",*c2;
                    c2= NULL;
                    memset(c2,0x00,sizeof(c2));
                    strncpy(c2,c,4);

                    jsulmJ Offline
                    jsulmJ Offline
                    jsulm
                    Lifetime Qt Champion
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #12

                    @Qt-embedded-developer said in why strncpy not copy 4 character in c2 ?:

                    can you just let me know what change in below code i need to do to add '\0'.

                    YOU NEED TO ALLOCATE MEMORY FOR c2...
                    You was already told so here: "You would either need to malloc() space, or set c2 to point to, say, a char c3[10]".
                    Please try at least to understand what others are writing.

                    As others already pointed out: learn C/C++ basics.

                    https://forum.qt.io/topic/113070/qt-code-of-conduct

                    Q 1 Reply Last reply
                    1
                    • jsulmJ jsulm

                      @Qt-embedded-developer said in why strncpy not copy 4 character in c2 ?:

                      can you just let me know what change in below code i need to do to add '\0'.

                      YOU NEED TO ALLOCATE MEMORY FOR c2...
                      You was already told so here: "You would either need to malloc() space, or set c2 to point to, say, a char c3[10]".
                      Please try at least to understand what others are writing.

                      As others already pointed out: learn C/C++ basics.

                      Q Offline
                      Q Offline
                      Qt embedded developer
                      wrote on last edited by Qt embedded developer
                      #13

                      @jsulm @JonB Thank you

                      i got the success:

                      char* c= "hello world",*c2;
                      int n=5;
                      c2= NULL;

                      c2 = (char*) malloc(n*sizeof(char));
                      strncpy(c2,c,4);

                      cout<<c2; // this print the hell

                      JonBJ 1 Reply Last reply
                      0
                      • Q Qt embedded developer

                        @jsulm @JonB Thank you

                        i got the success:

                        char* c= "hello world",*c2;
                        int n=5;
                        c2= NULL;

                        c2 = (char*) malloc(n*sizeof(char));
                        strncpy(c2,c,4);

                        cout<<c2; // this print the hell

                        JonBJ Offline
                        JonBJ Offline
                        JonB
                        wrote on last edited by JonB
                        #14

                        @Qt-embedded-developer
                        Yeah, but why in the world you need such code with strncpy() & malloc() is quite beyond me....

                        P.S.
                        Technically your code is still not right. You will only copy hell, 4 characters, into the malloc()ed area, and that does initialize its memory allocation. The 5th character onward could be anything. You are "lucky" the cout<<c2 does not print helljgas978623i5tagsd534... :)

                        strncpy(c2,c,4);  // copies "hell", 4 characters, nothing more, does not add any terminator
                        c2[4] = '\0';  // need terminating '\0' here
                        cout<<c2; // this print the hell --- FOR SURE!
                        
                        S 1 Reply Last reply
                        4
                        • JonBJ JonB

                          @Qt-embedded-developer
                          Yeah, but why in the world you need such code with strncpy() & malloc() is quite beyond me....

                          P.S.
                          Technically your code is still not right. You will only copy hell, 4 characters, into the malloc()ed area, and that does initialize its memory allocation. The 5th character onward could be anything. You are "lucky" the cout<<c2 does not print helljgas978623i5tagsd534... :)

                          strncpy(c2,c,4);  // copies "hell", 4 characters, nothing more, does not add any terminator
                          c2[4] = '\0';  // need terminating '\0' here
                          cout<<c2; // this print the hell --- FOR SURE!
                          
                          S Offline
                          S Offline
                          SimonSchroeder
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #15

                          @JonB said in why strncpy not copy 4 character in c2 ?:

                          Technically your code is still not right.

                          Also: There is a memory leak because there is no matching free() for the malloc().

                          Just because it works now, does not mean it is valid code. You need to make sure for every C-style string that there is a terminating '\0'. There is no other way to know the length of the string. Every C algorithm expects the terminating '\0'. The reason why this might work right now could be that you are compiling a debug version and this will initialize the memory with zeros. Once you compile a release version your application might suddenly crash. At least it is not guaranteed to work. Another reason that it works might be because you are lucky that there is a 0 in memory. Just one little change in code might get you a different memory allocation/access pattern and the 0 is gone.

                          Since you are already using cout this means you are using C++. C++ is here to help you, not to punish you. Use std::string instead of char*. Try to avoid new and malloc because you always might forget the corresponding delete or free. std::string and std::vector (and other containers) will gladly manage memory for you. If you really need a pointer, use a smart pointer (together with make_unique or make_shared, so you don't have to use new which might accidentally leave a memory leak).

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