Copy a string, to a maximum length
#include <string.h> char* strncpy( char* dst, const char* src, size_t n );
libc
Use the -l c option to qcc to link against this library. This library is usually included automatically.
The strncpy() function copies no more than n characters from the string pointed to by src into the array pointed to by dst.
Copying of overlapping objects isn't guaranteed to work properly. See the memmove() function if you wish to copy objects that overlap. |
If the string pointed to by src is shorter than n characters, null characters are appended to the copy in the array pointed to by dst, until n characters in all have been written. If the string pointed to by src is longer than n characters, then the result isn't terminated by a null character.
The same pointer as dst.
#include <stdio.h> #include <stdlib.h> #include <string.h> int main( void ) { char buffer[15]; printf( "%s\n", strncpy( buffer, "abcdefg", 10 ) ); printf( "%s\n", strncpy( buffer, "1234567", 6 ) ); printf( "%s\n", strncpy( buffer, "abcdefg", 3 ) ); printf( "%s\n", strncpy( buffer, "*******", 0 ) ); return EXIT_SUCCESS; }
produces the output:
abcdefg 123456g abc456g abc456g
Safety: | |
---|---|
Cancellation point | No |
Interrupt handler | Yes |
Signal handler | Yes |
Thread | Yes |
memmove(), strcpy(), strdup(), strlcpy(), wcscpy(), wcsncpy(), wmemmove()