added documentation for strncpy (#27565)
* added documentation for strncpy * fix: formatting
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committed by
Christopher McCormack
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@ -132,7 +132,10 @@ int main(void) {
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### Playing with Strings
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### Playing with Strings
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Printing strings is easy, but other operations are slightly more complex. Thankfully, the `string.h` library has some helpful functions to use for a number of situations.
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Printing strings is easy, but other operations are slightly more complex. Thankfully, the `string.h` library has some helpful functions to use for a number of situations.
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#### Copying: `strcpy`
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#### Copying Strings
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##### `strcpy`
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`strcpy` (from 'string copy') copies a string. For example, this code snippet will copy the contents of the string variable `second` into the string variable `first`:
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`strcpy` (from 'string copy') copies a string. For example, this code snippet will copy the contents of the string variable `second` into the string variable `first`:
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```C
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```C
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strcpy(first, second);
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strcpy(first, second);
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@ -150,6 +153,13 @@ void copy_string(char [] first_string, char [] second_string)
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}
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}
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```
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```
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##### `strncpy`
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`strncpy` copies a specified number of characters from one string to a new string. For example, say we have a string `second` that we only want the first 5 characters of. We could copy it to a string `first` using:
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```C
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strncpy(first, second, 5);
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```
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Note: both `strcpy` and `strncpy` make sure that the copied string ends in a null terminator, but this isn't true for all string copying functions. `strdup` which allocates space for the new string and copies it doesn't add a null terminator!
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#### Concatenate: `strcat`
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#### Concatenate: `strcat`
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`strcat` (from 'string concatenate') will concatenate a string, meaning it will take the contents of one string and place it on the end of another string. In this example, the contents of `second` will be concatenated onto `first`:
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`strcat` (from 'string concatenate') will concatenate a string, meaning it will take the contents of one string and place it on the end of another string. In this example, the contents of `second` will be concatenated onto `first`:
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```C
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```C
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