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Home/ Questions/Q 9115019
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 17, 20262026-06-17T04:19:56+00:00 2026-06-17T04:19:56+00:00

I’m a little bit confused regarding string memory usage in c++. Is it good

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I’m a little bit confused regarding string memory usage in c++.

Is it good reassign *PChar to NULL second time? Will assigned first time to *PChar string memory be released?

char * fnc(int g)
{
...
}

char *PChar = NULL;
PChar=fnc(1);
if (PChar) { sprintf(s,"%s",PChar); } ;

*PChar = NULL;
PChar=fnc(2);
if (PChar) { sprintf(s,"%s",PChar); } ;
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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-17T04:19:57+00:00Added an answer on June 17, 2026 at 4:19 am

    First things first. The following statement is not what you intend:

    *PChar = NULL;
    PChar=fnc(2);
    

    You are NOT assigning null to the pointer, but putting value zero (0) to the first character of the said buffer. You might be willing to do:

       PChar = NULL;
       PChar=fnc(2);
    

    As a good programming practice, yes you should assign a pointer to null after it is used (AND possibility memory-deallocated). But assigning a pointer to null will not free the memory – the pointer will not point to allocated memory, but to non-existent memory location. You need to call delete if it was allocated using new, or need to call free if allocated by malloc.

    As for the given statement, the compiler would anyway remove the following statement, as the process of optimization:

     // PChar = NULL;
     PChar=fnc(2);
    

    You need to be very careful while using pointers, and assignment to it with a statically allocated data or dynamically allocated buffer!

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