man dynarr () - simple dynamic arrays

NAME

dynarr, dynarr_init, dynarr_resize, dynarr_free - simple dynamic arrays

SYNOPSIS

#include <publib.h>

void dynarr_init(struct dynarr *da, size_t elsize);
int dynarr_resize(struct dynarr *da, size_t newsize);
void dynarr_free(struct dynarr *da);

DESCRIPTION

These functions make it easier to use dynamic arrays, i.e., arrays that are allocated with malloc(3) and resized with realloc(3). Below is a typical code fragment for implementing a dynamic array that is resized as more input is read.

char *p, *line;
size_t alloc, len;

len = 0; alloc = 1024; if ((line = malloc(alloc)) == NULL) abort();

while (fgets(line + len, alloc-len, stdin) != NULL) { len = strlen(line); alloc += 1024; if ((p = realloc(alloc)) == NULL) abort(); alloc = p; } (The error handling is intentionally simplified.) Below is the above fragment with the dynarr(3).

struct dynarr da;

dynarr_init(&da); while (fgets((char *)da.data + da.used, da.alloc-da.len, stdin) != NULL) { da.used = strlen(da.data); if (dynarr_resize(&da, da.alloc + 1024) == -1) abort(); } The code is a bit simpler, and all the memory allocation details and most of the error checking code is hidden away.

The dynamic array is represented by a struct dynarr:

struct dynarr {
    void *data;
    size_t alloc, used;
};
The interface to the dynamic allocation has intentionally been made unopaque.

dynarr_init initializes a struct dynarr to be an empty array, dynarr_resize sets its size to be newsize, and dynarr_free frees the array (it will become an empty array again).

RETURNS

dynarr_resize returns -1 if it failed, 0 if it succeeded. It does not change the array in any way if it failed.

SEE ALSO

AUTHOR

Lars Wirzenius (lars.wirzenius@helsinki.fi)

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