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Home/ Questions/Q 8859331
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 14, 20262026-06-14T15:02:04+00:00 2026-06-14T15:02:04+00:00

Possible Duplicate: How do I work with dynamic multi-dimensional arrays in C? pointer to

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Possible Duplicate:
How do I work with dynamic multi-dimensional arrays in C?
pointer to array type, c

If my C89 ANSI (e.g. not C99) C code declares a variable AND allocates memory using:

char myArray[30000][3];

Is there a way I can de-couple the declaration from the memory allocation by using malloc()? For example (and pardon my newbie-ness):

char *myArray;
int i, arrayLength;
...
/* compute arrayLength */
...
myArray = malloc( sizeof(char) * arrayLength * 3);
for (i=0; ii<arrayLength; i++) 
   strncpy(myArray[i], "ab", 3);
...
free(myArray);

The goal is to create myArray looking like, for example:

myArray[0] = "ab"
myArray[1] = "ab"
myArray[2] = "ab"
...
myArray[arrayLength-1] = "ab"

Is that the right approach?

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-14T15:02:05+00:00Added an answer on June 14, 2026 at 3:02 pm

    It looks like you want to make the first array size a variable run-time value (specified by arrayLength), while keeping the second size as fixed compile-time value (3). In that specific situation it is easy

    char (*myArray)[3];
    int arrayLength;
    ...
    /* compute arrayLength */
    ...
    myArray = malloc(arrayLength * sizeof *myArray);
    for (i = 0; i < arrayLength; ++i) 
      strcpy(myArray[i], "ab");
    ...
    free(myArray);
    

    Things will get more complicated if you decide to make the second array size a run-time value as well.

    P.S. strncpy is not supposed to serve as a “safe” version of strcpy (see https://stackoverflow.com/a/2115015/187690, https://stackoverflow.com/a/6987247/187690), so I used strcpy in my code. But you can stick with strncpy if you so desire.

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