97

What is the difference between memcpy() and strcpy()? I tried to find it with the help of a program but both are giving the same output.

int main()
{
    char s[5]={'s','a','\0','c','h'};
    char p[5];
    char t[5];
    strcpy(p,s);
    memcpy(t,s,5);
    printf("sachin p is [%s], t is [%s]",p,t);
    return 0;
}

Output

sachin p is [sa], t is [sa]
1

9 Answers 9

140

what could be done to see this effect

Compile and run this code:

void dump5(char *str);

int main()
{
    char s[5]={'s','a','\0','c','h'};

    char membuff[5]; 
    char strbuff[5];
    memset(membuff, 0, 5); // init both buffers to nulls
    memset(strbuff, 0, 5);

    strcpy(strbuff,s);
    memcpy(membuff,s,5);

    dump5(membuff); // show what happened
    dump5(strbuff);

    return 0;
}

void dump5(char *str)
{
    char *p = str;
    for (int n = 0; n < 5; ++n)
    {
        printf("%2.2x ", *p);
        ++p;
    }

    printf("\t");

    p = str;
    for (int n = 0; n < 5; ++n)
    {
        printf("%c", *p ? *p : ' ');
        ++p;
    }

    printf("\n", str);
}

It will produce this output:

73 61 00 63 68  sa ch
73 61 00 00 00  sa

You can see that the "ch" was copied by memcpy(), but not strcpy().

2
  • 3
    Hello, I know that post is old, but I have two questions regarding it. First - printf("%2.2x ", *p); - why did You limit printf to 2.2 ? Besides I can see NO dot at all... Second - printf("%c", *p ? *p : ' '); - what does this test really check? If *p ? Thanks in advance for Your answer! Aug 30, 2012 at 9:02
  • 16
    In a printf statement, "x" means "base 16". "2.2" means: two and only two digits. The *p test means: "if you hit a null, print a space."
    – egrunin
    Aug 30, 2012 at 15:43
112

strcpy stops when it encounters a NUL ('\0') character, memcpy does not. You do not see the effect here, as %s in printf also stops at NUL.

3
  • 2
    @Sachin: Initialize p and t to something (all blanks, for example), then after copying, compare p[3] to t[3]. The strcpy didn't go beyond p[2], where it found the null character, but the memcpy as directed copied five characters.
    – Cascabel
    May 24, 2010 at 16:23
  • 11
    Minor nit-pick: strcpy stops when it encounters the NUL character (one "L"). NULL (two "L"s) is a compile-time constant for a pointer guaranteed not to point to any valid object. May 25, 2010 at 1:52
  • 1
    if dest and src overlap, strcpy will throw out a seg-fault?
    – Alcott
    Sep 16, 2011 at 12:37
13

strcpy terminates when the source string's null terminator is found. memcpy requires a size parameter be passed. In the case you presented the printf statement is halting after the null terminator is found for both character arrays, however you will find t[3] and t[4] have copied data in them as well.

10

strcpy copies character from source to destination one by one until it find NULL or '\0' character in the source.

while((*dst++) = (*src++));

where as memcpy copies data (not character) from source to destination of given size n, irrespective of data in source.

memcpy should be used if you know well that source contain other than character. for encrypted data or binary data, memcpy is ideal way to go.

strcpy is deprecated, so use strncpy.

3
  • I don't know where did you see strcpy() being deprecated.
    – Rohan Bari
    Jan 30, 2021 at 20:50
  • 1
    @RohanBari It's a royal outrage if this is someone with only MSVC experience speaking about "deprecated functions" all over again for the billionth time
    – An Ant
    Feb 25, 2021 at 17:12
  • strcpy() is not deprecated, it's only discouraged (because strncpy() is less vulnerable to buffer overruns). Not the same thing at all.
    – egrunin
    Dec 29, 2022 at 16:50
4

The main difference is that memcpy() always copies the exact number of bytes you specify; strcpy(), on the other hand, will copy until it reads a NUL (aka 0) byte, and then stop after that.

3
  • Behavior difference: strcpy stops when it encounters a NULL or '\0'
  • Performance difference: memcpy is usually more efficient than strcpy, which always scan the data it copies
3

Because of the null character in your s string, the printf won't show anything beyond that. The difference between p and t will be in characters 4 and 5. p won't have any (they'll be garbage) and t will have the 'c' and 'h'.

2

The problem with your test-program is, that the printf() stops inserting the argument into %s, when it encounters a null-termination \0. So in your output you probably have not noticed, that memcpy() copied the characters c and h as well.

I have seen in GNU glibc-2.24, that (for x86) strcpy() just calls memcpy(dest, src, strlen(src) + 1).

1

printf("%s",...) stops printing the data when null is encountered, so both the outputs are same.

The following code differentiates between strcpy and memcpy:

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

int main()
{
    char s[5]={'s','a','\0','c','h'};
    char p[5];
    char t[5];
    int i;
    strcpy(p,s);
    memcpy(t,s,5);
    for(i=0;i<5;i++)
        printf("%c",p[i]);
        printf("\n");
    for(i=0;i<5;i++)
        printf("%c",t[i]);

    return 0;
}

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