Question

I am trying to learn C with The C programming Language by K&R. I am trying to write a the strcat() program using pointers.

char *strcat (char *s, char *t){
    char *d;
    d = s;
    while(*s++);
    s--;
    while(*s++ = *t++);
    return d;
}

int main () {
    char *name1;
    char *name2;
    name1 = "stack" ;
    name2 = "overflow";
    printf("%s %s\n", name1, name2);
    printf("strcat out : %s", strcat(name1, name2));
    return 0;
}

But I am getting the ouput as

stack overflow
Segmentation fault

Why is it not working ? Can anybody clarify the mistake here..

Was it helpful?

Solution

Because the pointers are pointers to literals, and not only are those read only the destination is not big enough to contain both the strings. For at least string1 you would want to use an array of at least big enough size to contain both strings (including the terminator). Like:

char string1[128] = "Stack";

or

char string1[128];
strcpy(string1, "Stack");

OTHER TIPS

The program tries to append characters to the literal string "stack". Don't do that; create an array of characters that's large enough to hold the result, copy the first string into the array, and then strcat the rest of the string.

Oh, and name your function something other than strcat. That name is already taken.

In this line:

while(*s++ = *t++);

you dereference s which points to one-past-the-end of the char array "stack". This causes segmentation fault error.

 char *name1;
 char *name2;
 name1 = "stack" ;
 name2 = "overflow";

==>

 char name1[20];
 char name2[10];
 memcpy(name1,"stack") ;
 memcpy(name2,"overflow");
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