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I need to pass const char * to a function. Before I pass it, I usually need to build it from some variables. I can never decide which approach is more elegant, and overall better:

  • Allocate an array long enough to fit the text and use sprintf to build the final variable and pass it to the function.
  • Initialize string s with a variable using the + operator (concatenation) and then pass it to the function using s.c_str().

Cons of using an array: May not fit the entire text.
Pro: Fast.

Cons of using a string: I don't need to worry about memory management, easy to build. Pro: Slow.

My second question is: How do you usually build a complete string from other variable strings?

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    Not a dupe, but perhaps worth checking out: stackoverflow.com/questions/445315/…
    – Reunanen
    Jul 17, 2009 at 16:54
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    Even if there's reason to use the pure C approach, please never use sprintf() - use snprintf() instead. Jul 17, 2009 at 18:28
  • I wouldn't picture sprintf/snprintf as being the most efficient, after all it has to parse the formatting string, however it does feel far more syntatically clear than much of the c++ methodology. To be honest the standard string manipulation in both C and C++ could use some work in terms of elegance and efficiency. Jul 19, 2009 at 0:01

7 Answers 7

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Unless it's absolutely performance critical, I tend to use a std::stringstream to build up the string from its components and then c_str() the resulting string. This is safe as there isn't really a chance of a buffer overflow this way and usually fast enough.

If the profiler tells me that building up the string is a hot spot then you will have to trade some safety for speed and start using something like sprintf but I'd rather avoid this. Overall I'd use this as a last resort.

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    You do not have to trade in the safety since you can use snprintf instead of sprintf. Jul 17, 2009 at 17:06
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    snprintf is still pretty unsafe, even if there's not a problem with buffer overflow. Stick with stringstream, or at the very least, string. If, after profiling the code, you find out that this is a bottleneck, you can optimize later.
    – moswald
    Jul 17, 2009 at 17:56
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    snprintf is not safe. It protects against buffer overflows, sure, but it does nothing to ensure type safety.
    – jalf
    Jul 17, 2009 at 18:25
  • snprintf should be avoided because you can easily run into off-by-one errors (which can be exploitable in certain situations). use snprintf_s instead
    – newgre
    Jul 18, 2009 at 12:51
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This really sounds like a case for Herb Sutter's excellent article The String Formatters of Manor Farm.

For the record: I myself use std::ostringstream, build the string up and pass oss.str().c_str().

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One crash from a too-short buffer will negate all the speed savings you get from sprintf. I'm not convinced it's faster anyway. And even if it is, is the difference significant enough to worry about?

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    +1. The only real good reason to use char arrays instead is if you are working on a RealTime system and need deterministic behavior from that code.
    – T.E.D.
    Jul 17, 2009 at 17:38
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I almost always use string and stringstream, due to the easier memory management. sprintf and other old-fashioned-C library calls are just too error-prone.

The one benefit of sprintf-style functions over stringstream is that it makes it easy to use different format strings at runtime, for internationalization purposes. But you should definitely use snprintf or one of the other "safer" variants of it.

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    Boost formatting will do the internationalizastion bit you require. Jul 17, 2009 at 19:51
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When it comes to C++ and elegance, I tend to follow two rules:

  1. Say what you mean.
  2. Profile first, optimize later.

You're talking about concatenating strings here, so this is the code that comes to mind:

std::string s = s1 + s2 + s3 + s4;
foo(s.c_str());

To "say what you mean," I reach for operator +. Using std::stringstream (a stream of strings) is pretty good too, but I don't immediately go for another #include just to concatenate strings. It's a matter of personal preference I guess. I definitely don't think of building up a raw char array by hand.

In terms of performance, my guess is that operator + is probably the slowest method of putting the strings together. But even a slow method might be fast enough for your purposes.

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Repeat the following to yourself three times every morning when you wake up and three times every night before you go to bed:

"Premature optimization is the root of all evil." - Knuth

In other words, go with the safe, idiomatic C++ way. Speed should be fixed when (and if) it becomes an issue, not before, ESPECIALLY if fixing it before makes your code more error-prone.

As for your second question: look up ropes.

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    First of all, your quote is incorrect - check what exactly Knuth said (about percentage). Secondly, perhaps it sounds like a heresy, but this Knuth's saying is nothing more then a dogma, especially in the way you recommend to use it. I think this dogma did more harm than good - programmers learned not to care about performance of their code. If you suspect particular place will be a hot spot, optimise it right away, during design phase. This approach never failed on me. Last one - ropes are useless for people who need good old null-terminated strings.
    – qrdl
    Jul 18, 2009 at 12:52
  • @qrdl... I guess you're right. shreevatsa.wordpress.com/2008/05/16/…
    – kenny
    Jul 18, 2009 at 13:10
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    You know, I've heard way too may "Script Kitties," who NEVER even consitered reading Knuth quote that. Typically they use it justify why they are using a scripting language, and not even to justify thier design and as an excuse not to the thing which I was always told you should do first before you write any code... THINK. Moores law can't overcome inefficiently designed software written on scripting languages, implemented on a language VM, running on a virtual Linux server being timeshared by 100 clients. Jul 18, 2009 at 16:25
  • @qrdl I'll look up the Knuth quote. It's not that you shouldn't care about the performance of your code. It's just that there are other concerns; type-safety, memory management, etc.; which should be prioritized in this and many other cases. The logic is simple: don't fix things that MIGHT be broken when there are other things that ARE broken staring you in the face. As for ropes vs. strings, strings are useless for people who need good old ropes. What's your point? Each has its uses. I suggested ropes because ropes excel when there's concatenation, which is what he asked about.
    – Imagist
    Jul 18, 2009 at 19:58
  • @Pete Eddy Not only have I read Knuth's Art of Computer Programming Vols. 1-3, but I write a significant amount of C/C++ in my personal projects. Please don't justify your position by attacks on those who disagree with you. It's not about relying on Moore's law, it's about K.I.S.S. Of course you shouldn't make any glaring design errors (don't sort a billion entries with bubblesort!). But also don't overcomplicate your code and sacrifice type-safety to fix phantom performance problems.
    – Imagist
    Jul 18, 2009 at 19:58
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You didn't mention your platform, but in case you use glibc as your standard library, there is GNU extension - asprintf(), that automatically allocate string big enough.

See man asprintf for details.

More universal approach - first call fprintf() to unused stream just to get the returned length, then allocate the string and print to it, like this:

FILE *stream = tmpfile();
char *string;

string = malloc(fprintf(stream, format, param)+1);
sprintf(string, format, param);
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  • I a needed it a mutli platform solution: Win32, solaris, AS3, AS4, AS5....interesting function
    – Sasha
    Jul 18, 2009 at 12:52

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