I'm working on an assignment, and my professor has given us the function prototypes for everything we are supposed to use, as well as the structure definitions.
The purpose of the program is to read .vcf (vCard) files.
We have a function readVcFile which calls readVcard which calls the appropriate functions to read each line and parse it.
Here are the relevant function prototypes to my question:
VcStatus readVcFile( FILE *const vcf, VcFile *const filep );
VcStatus readVcard( FILE *const vcf, Vcard **const cardp );
VcStatus getUnfolded( FILE *const vcf, char **const buff );
What I am having trouble figuring out, is when to allocate memory. From what i understand, most of the pointers are supposed to be a way of returning a value. For instance, I have figured out getUnfolded, which took the pointer to string, and used that pointer to fill up the string with whatever characters were on the line.
Where I am having more trouble is with readVcard.
Remember, readVcFile calls readVcard, and there can be multiple vcards in a vcf file, so it may call more then once. Now my question is, when (and how) should I malloc a vCard. Do i malloc before I call readVcard? And how do I access that vcard once I am in readVcard?
This is all very confusing, so I appreciate any attempts to clarify things for me.
Thanks.
Edit: If it helps, the size of vcards can vary, so I need to use malloc.