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Top Forums Programming Strange character added when reading to buffer with length of 12 Post 302265726 by shamrock on Monday 8th of December 2008 10:31:39 AM
Old 12-08-2008
You are either allocating too much or too little. When you need memory for "123456789012" you need to malloc memory for 13 (12 char + 1 NULL) characters otherwise you see junk concatenated in the output. Here you know there will be 12 characters so why not do...
Code:
a = 12;
str = malloc(a*sizeof(char)+1);

 

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XMALLOC(3pub)						       C Programmer's Manual						     XMALLOC(3pub)

NAME
xmalloc, xrealloc, xfree, xstrdup, xmemdup, memdup - memory allocation functions for Publib SYNOPSIS
#include <publib.h> void *xmalloc(size_t bytes); void *xrealloc(void *ptr, size_t bytes); void xfree(void *ptr); char *xstrdup(const char *string); void *memdup(const void *mem, size_t bytes); void *xmemdup(const void *mem, size_t bytes); DESCRIPTION
These functions are utility functions for memory allocation from the publib library. xmalloc, xrealloc, and xfree are error checking ver- sions of the standard library routines malloc, realloc, and free, respectively. They are guaranteed to never return unless there was no problem: if, for example, xmalloc is unable to allocate the requested amount of memory, it prints an error message and terminates the pro- gram. Hence, the caller does not need to check for a NULL return value, and the code that calls these functions is simpler due to the lack of error checks. Similarly, xstrdup is an error checking version of the common (though not standard) strdup routine, which creates a duplicate of a string by allocating memory for the copy with malloc. (For systems that lack strdup, publib provides one in its portability module; it is always declared in <publib.h>.) memdup is similar to strdup, it creates a copy of an arbitrary memory area (the arguments are a pointer to the beginning of the area, and its size) by allocating memory for the copy with malloc. xmemdup is its error checking version. NOTE
xmalloc and xrealloc treat a request to allocate a block of 0 bytes as an error. xrealloc will allow its first argument to be NULL. SEE ALSO
publib(3), malloc(3), strdup(3) AUTHOR
Lars Wirzenius (lars.wirzenius@helsinki.fi) Publib C Programmer's Manual XMALLOC(3pub)
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