Possible Duplicate:
Why do I get a segmentation fault when writing to a string?
Why do I get a segmentation fault when I try to modify a string constant?
I was trying to run the following two codes and I am getting a segmentation fault with file2.c but with file1.c I am not getting any fault. Can somebody explain what is the difference between the following codes :
file1.c
#include <stdio.h>
int main()
{
int i;
char string[11] = {"HelloThere"};
string[10] = '\0';
for(i =0;i<5;i++)
{
string[i] = 'a';
}
printf("%s\n",string);
}
and :
file2.c
#include <stdio.h>
int main()
{
int i;
char * string;
string = "HelloThere";
for(i =0;i<5;i++)
{
string[i] = 'a';
}
printf("%s",string);
}
This is because the assignment
copies the string constant into a writable memory, while
leaves it in the read-only memory. While it is absolutely OK to write to the writable memory (duh!) writing to read-only memory is undefined behavior, and may trigger a crash.
Note that you do not need to specify the size of your string explicitly, unless you want to allocate more memory than is required for your string literal: