char *strcat( char *dest, const char *src );
(until C99)char *strcat( char *restrict dest, const char *restrict src );
(since C99)errno_t strcat_s(char *restrict dest, rsize_t destsz, const char *restrict src);
(2) (since C11)1) Appends a copy of the null-terminated byte string pointed to by src
to the end of the null-terminated byte string pointed to by dest
. The character src[0]
replaces the null terminator at the end of dest
. The resulting byte string is null-terminated.
The behavior is undefined if the destination array is not large enough for the contents of both src
and dest
and the terminating null character. The behavior is undefined if the strings overlap. The behavior is undefined if either dest
or src
is not a pointer to a null-terminated byte string.
Same as
(1), except that it may clobber the rest of the destination array (from the last character written to
destsz
) with unspecified values and that the following errors are detected at runtime and call the currently installed
constraint handlerfunction:
src
or dest
is a null pointerdestsz
is zero or greater than RSIZE_MAXdestsz
bytes of dest
dest
would not fit every character, including the null terminator, of src
)The behavior is undefined if the size of the character array pointed to by
dest
<
strlen(dest)+strlen(src)+1<=
destsz
; in other words, an erroneous value of
destsz
does not expose the impending buffer overflow.
strcat_s
is only guaranteed to be available if __STDC_LIB_EXT1__ is defined by the implementation and if the user defines __STDC_WANT_LIB_EXT1__ to the integer constant 1 before including <string.h>.
1) returns a copy of dest
2) returns zero on success, returns non-zero on error. Also, on error, writes zero to dest[0] (unless dest
is a null pointer or destsz
is zero or greater than RSIZE_MAX).
Because strcat
needs to seek to the end of dest
on each call, it is inefficient to concatenate many strings into one using strcat
.
strcat_s
is allowed to clobber the destination array from the last character written up to destsz
in order to improve efficiency: it may copy in multibyte blocks and then check for null bytes.
The function strcat_s
is similar to the BSD function strlcat
, except that
strlcat
truncates the source string to fit in the destinationstrlcat
does not perform all the runtime checks that strcat_s
doesstrlcat
does not make failures obvious by setting the destination to a null string or calling a handler if the call fails.Although strcat_s
prohibits truncation due to potential security risks, it's possible to truncate a string using bounds-checked strncat_s instead.
#define __STDC_WANT_LIB_EXT1__ 1 #include <string.h> #include <stdio.h> #include <stdlib.h> int main(void) { char str[50] = "Hello "; char str2[50] = "World!"; strcat(str, str2); strcat(str, " ..."); strcat(str, " Goodbye World!"); puts(str); #ifdef __STDC_LIB_EXT1__ set_constraint_handler_s(ignore_handler_s); int r = strcat_s(str, sizeof str, " ... "); printf("str = \"%s\", r = %d\n", str, r); r = strcat_s(str, sizeof str, " and this is too much"); printf("str = \"%s\", r = %d\n", str, r); #endif }
Possible output:
Hello World! ... Goodbye World! str = "Hello World! ... Goodbye World! ... ", r = 0 str = "", r = 22[edit] References
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