I want to develop a library with ANSI C.
I have a string
struct
:
struct libme_string
{
char* buffer;
int length;
};
I want to write a function, libme_create_string()
, that creates and initializes a string
(like constructors in C++).
Which of these methods is better for designing libme_create_string()
?
Method #1
Allocate memory for string object in libme_create_string()
and return it:
struct libme_string* libme_create_string(int length)
{
// Check arguments...
// Allocate memory for object.
struct libme_string* str = malloc(sizeof(struct libme_string));
// Handle memory allocation errors...
str->buffer = malloc(length);
str->length = length;
// Handle memory allocation errors...
return str;
}
void libme_delete_string(struct libme_string* str)
{
// Check arguments...
free(str->buffer);
free(str);
}
Use
struct libme_string* str;
str = libme_create_string(1024);
// ...
libme_delete_string(str);
str = NULL;
Method #2
Do not allocate memory for string object in libme_create_string()
function, accept it as an argument:
struct void libme_create_string(libme_string* str, int length)
{
// Check arguments...
// Just allocate memory for members.
str->buffer = malloc(length);
str->length = length;
// Handle memory allocation errors...
}
void libme_delete_string(struct libme_string* str)
{
// Check arguments...
free(str->buffer);
}
Use
struct libme_string str; // << different, not a pointer!
libme_create_string(&str, 1024);
// ...
libme_delete_string(&str);
Notes
string
just a sample.- Method #2 is faster, isn't it?
Lastly, are there any good design guidelines for designing libraries written in C?