strdup(3) osx man page | unix.com

Man Page: strdup

Operating Environment: osx

Section: 3

STRDUP(3)						   BSD Library Functions Manual 						 STRDUP(3)

NAME
strdup, strndup -- save a copy of a string
LIBRARY
Standard C Library (libc, -lc)
SYNOPSIS
#include <string.h> char * strdup(const char *s1); char * strndup(const char *s1, size_t n);
DESCRIPTION
The strdup() function allocates sufficient memory for a copy of the string s1, does the copy, and returns a pointer to it. The pointer may subsequently be used as an argument to the function free(3). If insufficient memory is available, NULL is returned and errno is set to ENOMEM. The strndup() function copies at most n characters from the string s1 always NUL terminating the copied string.
SEE ALSO
free(3), malloc(3)
HISTORY
The strdup() function first appeared in 4.4BSD. The strndup() function was added in FreeBSD 7.2.
BSD
December 5, 2008 BSD
Related Man Pages
strdup(3) - centos
strndup(3) - redhat
strndupa(3) - debian
strdup(3) - suse
strndup(3) - netbsd
Similar Topics in the Unix Linux Community
Hashtable + shared memory
C; storing strings in an array
Malloc problem with fread() to read file to structure in C
Compiling problem - AIX 7.2
NTP synchronised problem in our Centos 7.6 node