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Home/ Questions/Q 7583337
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 30, 20262026-05-30T18:39:11+00:00 2026-05-30T18:39:11+00:00

#include <stdio.h> int main() { int m,n; scanf(%d %d,&m,&n); char ar[m][n]; char buf[n]; int

  • 0
#include <stdio.h>

int main()
{
    int m,n; scanf("%d %d",&m,&n);
    char ar[m][n];
    char buf[n];
    int a,b;
    for(a=0;a<m;a++)
    {
        gets(buf);
        for(b=0;b<n;b++) ar[a][b] = buf[b];
    }
    for(a=0;a<m;a++,printf("\n")) for(b=0;b<n;b++) printf("%c",ar[a][b]);
    return 0;
}

This code takes m lines as input from stdin, each line containing n characters, and prints all the lines to stdout. Simple as that. But there seems to be a memory leak, because the first time gets(buf) is encountered, its execution is skipped.

I tried it in C++ too, thinking the memory leak will disappear. Here is the code:

#include <cstdio>
using namespace std;

int main()
{
    int m,n; scanf("%d %d",&m,&n);
    char **ar = new char*[m];
    char *buf = new char[n];
    int a,b;
    for(a=0;a<m;a++)
    {
        gets(buf);
        ar[a] = new char[n];
        for(b=0;b<n;b++) ar[a][b] = buf[b];
    }
    for(a=0;a<m;a++,printf("\n")) for(b=0;b<n;b++) printf("%c",ar[a][b]);
    return 0;
}

But it is behaving exactly the same.

Here is some sample input and output:

2 3
abc
def

output:

x��
abc

GDB doesn’t seem to show anything up too. Please help..

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-30T18:39:13+00:00Added an answer on May 30, 2026 at 6:39 pm

    It’s not a “memory leak”. The problem is that the first gets() call reads the newline from when you enter the two dimensions on the first line; it puts zero characters into the buffer, but you print 5, which is why you get a line of garbage.

    Add a “\n” at the end of the scanf() format string so scanf() consumes the newline, and your program will work perfectly. Note that gets() is terribly unsafe; using fgets(buf, n, stdin) is much preferred.

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