I have a malloced string that I needed to parse. I did all of the parsing using strtok()
. Strtok
has returned a pointer to me and if I printf
using that pointer the correct part of the parsed string gets printed. Afterwards I will be freeing the malloced string that the pointer returned by strtok
was pointing too.
How do I store what the pointer was pointing at into a struct such that the value remains in the struct variable even after the main string has been freed.
String: Tommy-1234567
My strtok
return pointer:
char *studentName= strtok(String1,"-");
char *studentNo= strtok(NULL,"-");
My struct:
typedef struct Student{
char *name; //Want name to be stored here even after string is freed
int *studentNumber; //Want no. to be stored here even after string is freed
}Student;
strdup(studentName)
?strdup
. You don'tfree
the (string) pointer returned bystrtok
: it points to a fragmented part of the string you passed to it. The only thing you free, is the original string pointer (if it wasmalloc
ed) or the fragment pointers (if they werestrdup
ed).strdup
will allocate more memory for, and copy the fragment of the parsed string.You can thenfree
the original string. Later, when you have finished with thestudent
struct, you can free the pointer that was stored instudent.name
.student.studentNumber
. Since the data isint
that's more complicated than just storing the number.