This might be one of the common questions, but all solutions I've seen so far are not working. I want to dynamically allocate 2D array of chars. I get these chars from a .txt file. I even have set number of rows (int r) and columns (int s). Allocation itself is working but whenever I try to load chars from a file into this array, it crashes. Have no idea why.
File is ordered in this way:
Here is the code:
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <string.h>
int main(int argc, char* argv[])
{
Opening desired file:
FILE* file;
file = fopen(argv[1], "r");
if (file == NULL) {
printf("Error occurred when loading the file, program quits now.");
return 1;
} else {
printf("File loaded successfully.");
}
Getting info about number of columns and rows (r are rows, s are columns):
int r,s,i,j;
char arrayInfo[6];
fgets (arrayInfo, 6, file);
char* comma = strchr(arrayInfo, ',');
s = atoi(comma - 1)+1;
r = atoi(comma + 1);
Memory allocation for a 2D array of chars:
char **array = malloc(r * sizeof(char *));
for(i=0;i<r;i++){
array[i] = malloc(s * sizeof(char));
}
NOT WORKING Loading of chars from a file and then printing them. This code would work with "char array [r][s];" instead of dynamic allocation.
for (j=0;j<r;j++) {
for (i=0;i<s;i++) {
array[i][j] = fgetc (file);
}
}
for (j=0;j<r;j++) {
for (i=0;i<s;i++) {
printf ("%c",array[i][j]);
}
}
return 0;
}
array[j][i]
instead ofarray[i][j]
.malloc
doesn't returnNULL
(as it does if, for instance, you run out of memory). Unless you have large values ofr
ands
, this probably won't matter, but it's good programming practice nonetheless.getline
library function.int
s in the snippets should really besize_t
s. No need to negative indices.sizeof(char)
is redundant assizeof(char)
is definded to be equal1
.