typedef struct {
int num_rows;
int num_cols;
int** data;
} BinaryMatrix;
BinaryMatrix *ConstructBinaryMatrix(int num_rows, int num_cols) {
BinaryMatrix matrix = {
.num_rows = num_rows,
.num_cols = num_cols,
.data = (int **) malloc((num_rows) * sizeof(int *)),
};
int i;
for (i = 0; i < num_cols; i++) {
matrix.data[i] = (int *) malloc(num_cols * sizeof(int));
}
return &matrix;
}
Is this the correct way to define a BinaryMatrix, and how to initialize it?
Thanks for your help.
I got the following error.
BinaryMatrix* M;
M = ConstructBinaryMatrix(2, 2);
printf("%d:%d", M->num_rows, M->num_cols);
The output is: 4198012:0
int** data
is not a matrix (aka 2D array). And it cannot point to such a type.int **
is of course the standard way of simulating a dynamically-allocated two-dimensional array in C, so I'm not sure why you are insisting it is "not a matrix".int**
you break the contiguous storage rule and make it hard to connect with other APIs that assumes this rule. Also it forces the compiler to assumes pointers to each row aliases which is an unnecessary performance penalty. The continence of[][]
pretty means nothing to a experienced C programmer.int **
cannot even represent a 2D array. A pointer is not an array. You cannot allocate or free it with a singlemalloc
, etc. It is just used that often because people cannot handle tghe pointer and array syntax of C correctly and because of bad advice by so-called experts.int (*array)[DIM]
is the correct syntax for a 2D array (resp. a pointer to a 1D array).int **
is no 2D array but an array of pointers (to possibly arrays). For the syntax: One shouldn't expose (or force) direct access to thedata
member, but rather provide a meaningfulint element(BinaryMatrix const * m, size_t column, size_t row)
to decouple user of the matrix and it's implementation / representation.