The question is to alphabetically sort the given string inputs in ascending order. I wrote the following code for the same. But after printing the entered names the program instead of sorting the strings is giving segmentation fault. I have spent good time over the issue but couldn't figure out anything. Any help would be appreciated.
#include <stdio.h>
#include <string.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
int main()
{
int x,i,j,length;
printf("Enter the number of names you want to sort.\n");
scanf("%d",&x);
char *names[x],*p,name[50],*t;
printf("Enter the names:\n");
for(i=0;i<x;i++)
{
scanf(" %[^\n]",name);
length = strlen(name);
p = (char *)malloc(length+1);
strcpy(p,name);
names[i] = p;
}
printf("Entered names are:\n\n");
for(i=0;i<x;i++)
{
printf("%s\n",names[i]);
}
printf("\n\nThe sorted names are:\n");
for(i=0;i<x-1;i++)
{
for(j=i+1;j<x;j++)
{
if(strcmp(names[i],names[j])>0)
{
strcpy(t,names[i]);
strcpy(names[i],names[j]);
strcpy(names[j],t);
}
}
}
for(i=0;i<x;i++)
{
printf("%s\n",names[i]);
}
return 0;
}
strcpy(t, names[i]);
Hmmm.. what doest
point to ?strcpy
at all when sorting. You have an array of pointers. So... swap pointers (which is probably the point of this little exercise in the first place). That will eliminate the erroneous copy into the unallocatedt
, and fix the problem @user3121023 stated below my prior comment. In short, it fixes your code.uint32_t
: they are ”just" values you can assign, just as regularint
s. It's just their value that is interpreted as an address, rather than a random integer (i.e. its value has a special meaning).