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Home/ Questions/Q 904135
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 15, 20262026-05-15T16:00:02+00:00 2026-05-15T16:00:02+00:00

I am having trouble freeing a pointer in a pointer array (values). typedef struct

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I am having trouble freeing a pointer in a pointer array (values).

typedef struct MyStruct{  char** values;  }MyStruct;

In C, I create dynamic array.

JSDictionary **array = (JSDictionary **)malloc(sizeof(JSDictionary *) * numRows);

The resultSet should be an array of JSDictionary pointers. I create the struct like:

JSDictionary * newJSDictionaryWithSize(unsigned int size)

{
JSDictionary *new = malloc(sizeof(JSDictionary));
    printf("new %p\n", self);
new->_size = size;
new->count = 0;

new->values = (char **) malloc(sizeof(char *) * size);
for(unsigned int i = 0; i < size; i++){
    new->values[i] = (char *)malloc(sizeof(char *));
}

return new;
}

Everything creates and works fine. It’s the free that gives me a problem.

void deallocJSDictionary(struct JSDictionary *self)

{
printf("dealloc %p\n", self);
for(unsigned int i = 0; i < self->_size; i++){
    printf("free %p\n", &self->values[i]);
    free(self->values[i]);
}
free(self->values);
free(self);

}

I get a pointer being freed was not allocated error. The pointer being passed in shows the same memory address as the one that I created and added to the array. The values pointer (in debugger) shows the same memory address in the dealloc function as it did when I created it. The problem is trying to free the first point in the values array. Any ideas why the first point in the values pointer array is different?

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-15T16:00:03+00:00Added an answer on May 15, 2026 at 4:00 pm

    I see two problems so far. First:

    new->values[i] = (char *)malloc(sizeof(char *));
    

    This line allocates a single pointer – probably not what you want. Should likely be something like:

    new->values[i] = malloc( MAX_SIZE_OF_VALUE );
    

    I.e. a buffer to hold the value. You can also allocate one big chuck to keep all values and just offset into that memory.

    Second:

    printf("free %p\n", &self->values[i]);
    free(self->values[i]);
    

    This prints and tries to free(3) two different pointers. First is the address of the second.

    As for the actual deallocation error – do you have assignments like this in the code that manages the dictionary?

    dict->values[i] = some_value;
    

    If so – you are overriding pointers to (and leaking) allocated memory with pointers to probably stack or static memory. You have to copy the the value into the “value-buffer”. Something like:

    strlcpy( dict->values[i], some_value, MAX_SIZE_OF_VALUE );
    

    Hope this helps.

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