13

I have declared an array char **arr; How to initialize the memory for the 2D char array.

Ankur
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6 Answers6

16

One way is to do the following:

char **arr = (char**) calloc(num_elements, sizeof(char*));

for ( i = 0; i < num_elements; i++ )
{
    arr[i] = (char*) calloc(num_elements_sub, sizeof(char));
}

It's fairly clear what's happening here - firstly, you are initialising an array of pointers, then for each pointer in this array you are allocating an array of characters.

You could wrap this up in a function. You'll need to free() them too, after usage, like this:

for ( i = 0; i < num_elements; i++ )
{
    free(arr[i]);
}

free(arr);

I think this the easiest way to do things and matches what you need.

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    I would use "*arr" instead of "char*" for the first calloc. And "**arr" instead of "char" for the calloc in the loop. – Andrei Ciobanu Apr 10 '10 at 18:01
  • By doing multiple allocations, the memory will not be continuous. Will it work fine while incrementing a pointer to access the value. – Ankur Apr 10 '10 at 18:05
  • @Ankur only withtin a *row* of the 2D array – Alex Jasmin Apr 10 '10 at 18:11
  • @Andrei So might I, (@Ankur - this is to guarantee you don't mix up the types) but I think what I've done here is clearer for an explanation. –  Apr 10 '10 at 18:22
11

There are two options for allocating an array of type char **

I've transcribed these 2 code samples from the comp.lang.c FAQ (which also contains a nice illustration of these two array types)

Option 1 - Do one allocation per row plus one for the row pointers.

char **array1 = malloc(nrows * sizeof(char *)); // Allocate row pointers
for(i = 0; i < nrows; i++)
  array1[i] = malloc(ncolumns * sizeof(char));  // Allocate each row separately

Option 2 - Allocate all the elements together and allocate the row pointers:

char **array2 = malloc(nrows * sizeof(char *));      // Allocate the row pointers
array2[0] = malloc(nrows * ncolumns * sizeof(char)); // Allocate all the elements
for(i = 1; i < nrows; i++)
  array2[i] = array2[0] + i * ncolumns;

You can also allocate only one memory block and use some arithmetic to get at element [i,j]. But then you'd use a char* not a char** and the code gets complicated. e.g. arr[3*ncolumns + 2] instead of arr[3][2]

Alex Jasmin
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4

You might be better off with a one dimensional array:

char *arr = calloc(WIDTH*HEIGHT, sizeof(arr[0]));

for (int y=0; y<HEIGHT; y++)
    for (int x=0; x<WIDTH; x++)
        arr[WIDTH*y+x] = 2*arr[WIDTH*y+x];

free(arr);
ndim
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2

Use the following trick:

typedef char char2D[1][1];

char2D  *ptr;

ptr = malloc(rows * columns, sizeof(char));

for(i = 0; i < rows; i++)
    for(j = 0; j < columns; j++)
        (*ptr)[i][j] = char_value;
adrian
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2

By 2D char array, if you mean a matrix of strings then it may be done in the following way.

int nChars = 25; // assuming a max length of 25 chars per string
int nRows = 4;
int nCols = 6;
char *** arr = malloc(nRows * sizeof(char **));
int i;
int j;
for(i = 0; i < nCols; ++i)
{
    arr[i] = malloc(nCols * sizeof(char *));
}
for(i = 0; i < nRows; ++i)
{
    for(j = 0; j < nCols; ++j)
    {
        arr[i][j] = malloc(nChars * sizeof(char));
        sprintf(arr[i][j], "Row %d Col %d", i, j);
    }
}

To print the 2D char array(matrix of strings(char arrays))

for(i = 0; i < nRows; ++i)
{
    for(j = 0; j < nCols; ++j)
    {
        printf("%s  ", arr[i][j]);
    }
    printf("\n");
}

Result is

Row 0 Col 0    Row 0 Col 1    Row 0 Col 2    Row 0 Col 3    Row 0 Col 4    Row 0 Col 5  
Row 1 Col 0    Row 1 Col 1    Row 1 Col 2    Row 1 Col 3    Row 1 Col 4    Row 1 Col 5  
Row 2 Col 0    Row 2 Col 1    Row 2 Col 2    Row 2 Col 3    Row 2 Col 4    Row 2 Col 5  
Row 3 Col 0    Row 3 Col 1    Row 3 Col 2    Row 3 Col 3    Row 3 Col 4    Row 3 Col 5  
r18ul
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1
char **array;
int row,column;
char temp='A';
printf("enter the row");
scanf("%d",&row);
printf("enter the column");
scanf("%d",&column);
array=(char **)malloc(row*sizeof(char *));
for (int i=0;i<row;i++)
{
    array[i]=(char*)malloc(column*sizeof(char));
}
Kavita Jain
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