I am filling up a string of characters and I double its size from time to time.
When I finish, I would like to free unused memory.
void fun (char **str, size_t *len) {
size_t lsi; //last_significant_index
//filling up the str and reallocating from time to time.
//*len is storing the total size of allocated memory at this point
// idea #1
free((*str)[lsi + 1]);
// idea #2
for(size_t i = lsi + 1; i < *len; i++) {
free(&(*str)[i]);
}
}
None of these ideas seem to work however
Is it even possible to do it? If so, how?
Details:
I am using this function to reallocate my strings:
static void increase_list_size(char **list, size_t *list_len)
{
size_t new_list_size = (*list_len + 1) * 2; // I am not allocating my list at the declaration, so *list_len initially equals 0.
char *new_list = malloc(sizeof(char) * new_list_size);
for (size_t i = 0; i < *list_len; i++)
{
new_list[i] = (*list)[i];
}
if (list != NULL) // I don't want to free an empty list (it wasn't allocated at the declaration!
{
free(*list);
}
(*list) = new_list;
*list_len = new_list_size;
}
As you can see, I am allocating two-times more memory every time - that's why I wanted to free unused memory at the end.
I thought there was some kind of a tricky way to do it, since I felt that you can only use free()
to free whole memory block.