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Home/ Questions/Q 751475
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 14, 20262026-05-14T14:40:16+00:00 2026-05-14T14:40:16+00:00

In my class we are writing our own copy of C’s malloc() function. To

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In my class we are writing our own copy of C’s malloc() function. To test my code (which can currently allocate space fine) I was using:

char* ptr = my_malloc(6*sizeof(char));
memcpy(ptr, "Hello\n", 6*sizeof(char));
printf("%s", ptr);

The output would typically be this:

Hello
Unprintable character

Some debugging figured that my code wasn’t causing this per se, as ptr’s memory is as follows:

[24 bytes of meta info][Number of requested bytes][Padding]

So I figured that printf was reaching into the padding, which is just garbage. So I ran a test of:
printf("%s", "test\nd"); and got:

test
d

Which makes me wonder, when DOES printf(“%s”, char*) stop printing chars?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-14T14:40:16+00:00Added an answer on May 14, 2026 at 2:40 pm

    It stops printing when it reaches a null character (\0), because %s expects the string to be null terminated (i.e., it expects the argument to be a C string).

    The string literal "test\nd" is null terminated (all string literals are null terminated). Your character array ptr is not, however, because you only copy six characters into the buffer (Hello\n), and you do not copy the seventh character–the null terminator.

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