I cannot create a 2D array from 2 variables (eg int arr[i][j] not allowed) so how would I create a dynamically sized 2D array?

The dimensions of the array are only known at runtime in my program. The array is to represent a grid. How would I code this in C?

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C99 allows you to declare VLA - variable-length arrays - so if you have a C99 compiler and no artificial (homework) constraints on your work, you can write precisely int arr[i][j];. (If you don't have a C99 compiler, it's time to get one.) With that said, how do you plan to access the array? You can either be hoping to use arr[i][j] to access an element, or you can be prepared to use a calculation like arr[i*n+j] to access it. The memory allocation patterns required are quite different for the two cases. – Jonathan Leffler Sep 17 '11 at 17:56
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5 Answers

up vote 4 down vote accepted

You have to allocate a 1-dimensional array:

int* array = calloc(m*n, sizof(int));

And access it like this:

array[i*n + j]

The compiler does exactly this when accessing two-dimensional arrays, and will probably output the same code when n can be guessed at compile time.

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First allocate an array of pointers

/* size_x is the width of the array */
int **array = calloc(size_x, sizeof(int*));

Then allocate each column

for(i = 0; i < size_y; i++) {
    /* size_y is the height */
    array[i] = calloc(size_y, sizeof(int));
}

You can access the elements with array[i][j]. Freeing the memory is done in reverse order:

for(i = 0; i < size_y; i++) {
    free(array[i]);
}
free(array);
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This is a FAQ on comp.lang.c (I took the liberty to add the c-faq tag), it even has a FGA (frequently given answer :-) See http://c-faq.com/aryptr/index.html, 6.16 How can I dynamically allocate a multidimensional array?

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In C a multidimensional array is just an array for which each element is another array.

So you need to first allocate memory for one array (the rows). You can use the malloc() function which will return a pointer to the array.

Then you iterate through the array and for each element you allocate memory for the number of columns.

NOTE: don't forget to free the memory you manually allocate with the free() function in the same way you used malloc() to allocate it.

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Some of the examples show multiple (more than 2) allocations for the array; it is perfectly feasible to do it in just two allocations (error checking omitted) for an n × m array:

int **array = calloc(m, sizeof(*array));
int *data   = calloc(m * n, sizof(*data));

for (int i = 0; i < m; i++)
    array[i] = &data[i * n];


...use array[i][j]...

free(array[0]);
free(array);
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