1

I need help with initializing a pointer to char array inside another function.

I'm passing a char array and pointer to char array to a function. I would like to copy characters from variable 'word' to 'secret' by address/reference/pointer.

I was able to do it by passing values to a function like this:

char    *set_secret(char *word, char *secret)
{
    int     i;

    for (i = 0; word[i] != '\0'; i++)
    {
        if (word[i] == ' ')
            secret[i] = ' ';
        else
            secret[i] = SECRET_SYMBOL;
    }
    secret[i] = '\0';

    return(secret);
}

How can I do to copy characters into the pointer of char array by reference ?


Here's what I have (have checked malloc, it's all good):

SOURCE:

void    init_secret(const char *word, char **secret)
{
    int     i;
    *secret = NULL;
    *secret = (char*)malloc( sizeof(char) * strlen(word) + 1 );

    // trying changing secret value by reference and not by value (copy)
    for (i = 0; word[i] != '\0'; i++)
    {
        if (word[i] == ' ')
            *secret[i] = ' ';
        else
            *secret[i] = '_';
    }
    *secret[i] = '\0';
}

int     main(void)
{
    char    *str = "TALK TO THE HAND";
    char    *secret = NULL;

    init_secret(str, &secret);
    printf("Secret word: %s\n", secret);

    return(0);
}

OUTPUT:

Bus error: 10
1

1 Answer 1

3

Simply index on *secret:

(*secret)[i]

or use a char* help variable:

char* s = *secret; ...
4
  • Could you explain how it works ? I really thought *secret[i] was it.
    – Jay
    Feb 8, 2015 at 0:48
  • 1
    @Jean-BaptisteBouhier * has lower precedence than []. Also consider only assigning your string literals to char const*, and cranking up your compiler warnings.
    – Quentin
    Feb 8, 2015 at 0:49
  • @Quentin like gcc -Wall -Wextra -Werror file.c ? Which flags would you suggest ?
    – Jay
    Feb 8, 2015 at 1:00
  • 1
    @Jean-BaptisteBouhier -Wwrite-strings to be specific, or -std=* with one of the standards. Albeit I'm genuinely surprised that the default (gnu89 I believe) does not raise the warning.
    – Quentin
    Feb 8, 2015 at 1:04

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.