I have a while
loop inside a for
loop to handle strings. Here is basically the structure of my code:
char myString[1000];
//Initialize and maybe change myString
for(/*conditions*/){
while(/*conditions*/){
if(strchr(myString,' ') == NULL){
break;
}
char *temp = malloc(sizeof(char) * strlen(myString));
strcpy(temp,myString);
*strchr(temp,' ') = '\0';
strcat(myString," ");
strcat(myString,temp);
free(temp);
}
}
Sometimes, this code works just fine, but sometimes the process ends and returns 3 which means that there is an error (3 is the return value that I usually get when I try to use NULL where I shouldn't like for example myPointer->example
where myPointer
is NULL). After some tests, I found out that the line that was causing the problem is free(temp);
. I tried to replace it with if(temp != NULL){free(temp);}
but it didn't change anything. I tried to declare temp
with char temp[1000]
instead of malloc
and take away the free(temp);
line but it still does the same thing. If I take away the free(temp);
line and still use malloc
the problem is solved but instead there is a huge memory leak, so I can't do that. If there is an error or not depends on what is in the myString
string, which means that if there is a certain value in there, there always is an error, and if there is another certain value, there never is an error, but I can't manage to find out what type of values work and which ones don't, it seems to be random.
Why does free(temp);
sometimes work and sometimes not and how can I get it to always work?
char *temp = malloc(sizeof(char) * strlen(myString)); strcpy(temp,myString);
out-of-bounds write, undefined behavior. Also, undefined behavior forNULL
-dereference ifstrchr()
returnsNULL
.sizeof( char )
is one by definition, thus it's redundant as part of the argument passed tomalloc()
.