I allocate a vector of strings in this way:
int number =0;
char** matrix = (char**)malloc(10);
//when I have to allocate a string, use
matrix[number] = (char*)malloc(lenght_of_string);
number++; //MAX 10
Ok, I want that the vector has a null pointer when there's no string, so I can use calloc:
int number =0;
char** matrix = (char**)calloc(10,1);
//when I have to allocate a string, use
matrix[number] = (char*)malloc(lenght_of_string);
number++; //MAX 10
But, if I do not want to use calloc, and use malloc instead, inizializing all the pointer values to null, why I get a SIGABRT signal on linux?
nt number =0;
char** matrix = (char**)malloc(10);
for (i=0;i<10;i++)
matrix[i] = NULL;
//when I have to allocate a string, use
matrix[number] = (char*)malloc(lenght_of_string); //ERROR: SIGABRT
number++; //MAX 10
I think that in the for cicle I overwrite some special informations about the memory allocated, can someone explain me what it happen?
Thank you anishsane, you are right, but sometimes I don't respect rules. So bad...anyway, sizeof(char) returns 1, so in this example it's the same to write 10*sizeof(char) and only 10. Why in the calloc function you pass first the size of char and then the number of chars? I read here: http://www.cplusplus.com/reference/cstdlib/calloc/ and I should pass first the number of chars and then the sizeof
sizeof(char**) != sizeof(char)
(char**)malloc(10)
tries to allocate 2.5char*
positions!sizeof
is for.