21

One of the answers to Why do you not use C for your web apps? contains the following:

For the C crap example below:

const char* foo = "foo";
const char* bar = "bar";
char* foobar = (char*)malloc(strlen(foo)+strlen(bar)+1);
strcpy(foobar, foo);
strcat(foobar, foo);

Actually, constants CAN AND SHOULD be concatenated naturally in C:

const char foo[] = "foo";
const char bar[] = "bar";
char foobar[] = foo bar; // look Ma, I did it without any operator!

And using [] instead of * will even let you modify the string, or find their length:

int foo_str_len = sizeof(foobar)-1;

So, PLEASE, before you (falsely) claim that C is difficult to use with strings, learn how to use C.


I've tried it myself but get an error:

expected ‘,’ or ‘;’ before string constant

So my question is: Do I need to tell the compiler something in order to make this work or is the above post simply wrong? Please note that I'm aware of other ways to concatenate character arrays in C.

1

3 Answers 3

42

(char*)malloc

Never typecast the result of malloc in C. Read this and this.

Actually, constants CAN AND SHOULD be concatenated naturally in C

No, string literals can and should be concatenated in C. "foo" is a string literal and const char foo[] is a constant string (array of characters). The code "foo" "bar" will concatenate automatically, the code foo bar will not.

If you want, you can hide the string literals behind macros:

#define foo "foo"
#define bar "bar"
char foobar[] = foo bar; // actually works

So, PLEASE, before you (falsely) claim that C is difficult to use with strings, learn how to use C.

C is rather difficult to use with strings, as we can see from this very example. Despite their arrogant confidence, the person who wrote it mixed up the various concepts and still has to learn how to use C.

2
  • 1
    @Lundin does this work with "foo" bar() where bar() returns a char *? Jan 15, 2015 at 23:52
  • 2
    @AlexejMagura A char* is not a string literal, so no.
    – Lundin
    Jan 16, 2015 at 7:20
7

That answer looks like someone managed to conflate string literals, which can be concatenated that way, with const string variables. My guess is the original had preprocessor macros instead of variables.

-1
#include <stdio.h>
#include <string.h>

int
main(int argc, char *argv[])
{
    char *str1 = "foo";
    char *str2 = "bar";
    char ccat[strlen(str1)+strlen(str2)+1];

    strncpy(&ccat[0], str1, strlen(str1));
    strncpy(&ccat[strlen(str1)], str2, strlen(str2));
    ccat[strlen(str1)+strlen(str2)+1] = '\0';

    puts(str1);
    puts(str2);
    puts(ccat);
}

this code concatenates str1 and str2 without the need for malloc, the output should be:

foo
bar
foobar
2
  • Yes, I know, I forgot to return exit status
    – Raiz
    Jul 27, 2016 at 9:56
  • Please not Again. SO is not a Tutorial Site.
    – Michi
    Jul 27, 2016 at 10:15

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