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Top Forums Programming Trouble freeing memory after ctrl+D Post 302377899 by oddworld on Saturday 5th of December 2009 05:51:06 PM
Old 12-05-2009
Quote:
Originally Posted by jim mcnamara
Also - when your program exits, the OS "frees" all memory anyway. There is no memory leak, therefore.
I don't think this is true, at least using SUS2 like I am. Any piece of malloc'd memory has to be freed before the program exits or it is considered leaked memory. If you run the sample code I posted above with valgrind and just hit enter, it will report the leaked memory (since it does not free the line if the program exits normally). My question is, why does the program leak memory when an EOF is sent from the keyboard even though it tries to free the memory before returning in that case?
 

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readkey(3alleg4)						  Allegro manual						  readkey(3alleg4)

NAME
readkey - Returns the next character from the keyboard buffer. Allegro game programming library. SYNOPSIS
#include <allegro.h> int readkey(); DESCRIPTION
Returns the next character from the keyboard buffer, in ASCII format. If the buffer is empty, it waits until a key is pressed. You can see if there are queued keypresses with keypressed(). The low byte of the return value contains the ASCII code of the key, and the high byte the scancode. The scancode remains the same whatever the state of the shift, ctrl and alt keys, while the ASCII code is affected by shift and ctrl in the normal way (shift changes case, ctrl+letter gives the position of that letter in the alphabet, eg. ctrl+A = 1, ctrl+B = 2, etc). Pressing alt+key returns only the scan- code, with a zero ASCII code in the low byte. For example: int val; ... val = readkey(); if ((val & 0xff) == 'd') /* by ASCII code */ allegro_message("You pressed 'd' "); if ((val >> 8) == KEY_SPACE) /* by scancode */ allegro_message("You pressed Space "); if ((val & 0xff) == 3) /* ctrl+letter */ allegro_message("You pressed Control+C "); if (val == (KEY_X << 8)) /* alt+letter */ allegro_message("You pressed Alt+X "); This function cannot return character values greater than 255. If you need to read Unicode input, use ureadkey() instead. SEE ALSO
install_keyboard(3alleg4), ureadkey(3alleg4), keypressed(3alleg4), clear_keybuf(3alleg4), simulate_keypress(3alleg4) Allegro version 4.4.2 readkey(3alleg4)
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