-1

I have a difficulty in understanding how strcat works.

char A[] = "H";
char B[] = "L";
char C[] = "12345678901234567890"; // 20 digits => 20 bytes
cout<< &A <<" "<< &B <<" "<< &C <<endl;
strcat(A,C);
cout<< &A <<" "<< &B <<" "<< &C <<endl;

Output is

0x7ffd98b99f80 0x7ffd98b99f90 0x7ffd98b99fa0
0x7ffd98b99f80 0x7ffd98b99f90 0x7ffd98b99fa0

According to my understanding, before running strcat, difference in A's location and B's location is 0x10. This means, they have 16 bytes of space in between. After strcat, A has 20 more characters which means it should occupy 20 bytes more. To accommodate these additional characters, I thought that either A or B is shifted to a new location. But neither happens. Where is A storing all its bytes now? How does strcpy work?

6
  • 1
    Your code is broken. You're overwriting memory that you shouldn't.
    – SLaks
    Nov 15, 2015 at 22:31
  • 1
    std::strcat
    – 101010
    Nov 15, 2015 at 22:31
  • 1
    strcat is physically incapable of changing A to point to a different address, since all you pass is the value of that variable.
    – SLaks
    Nov 15, 2015 at 22:31
  • @SLaks Variables never change their address, there is nothing you can do (except for causing undefined behaviour) which will make &A change
    – M.M
    Nov 15, 2015 at 23:31
  • @M.M: No; you could make it a pointer. (and pass the address of the pointer)
    – SLaks
    Nov 15, 2015 at 23:33

3 Answers 3

3

strcat does not allocate new memory for you, it is your job to make sure the destination buffer is big enough. It will simply append to the original string assuming it can.

This is clearly stated in every documentation.

1

When you use strcat, you are responsible for providing adequate space. If you neglect to do so (as in your example), you write into unreserved space, which is undefined behavior.

1

What's happening is that you are lucky.

strcat() copies the contents of B to the end of A.

In your case, that appears to be exactly where B already exists. You are lucky that your implementation didn't fail on that alone.

strcat() will never (re)allocate memory for a string -- the memory must already exist and be sufficient for the additional string data. Otherwise you are overwriting other objects in memory -- which may cause disastrous results.

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.