The local variables have a lifetime which extends only inside the block in which it is defined. The moment the control goes outside the block in which the local variable is defined, the storage for the variable is no more allocated (not guaranteed). Therefore, using the memory address of the variable outside the lifetime area of the variable will be undefined behaviour.
On the other hand you can do the following.
char *str_to_ret = malloc (sizeof (char) * required_size);
.
.
.
return str_to_ret;
And use the str_to_ret
instead. And when return
ing str_to_ret
, the address allocated by malloc
will be returned. The memory allocated by malloc
is allocated from the heap, which has a lifetime which spans the entire execution of the program. Therefore, you can access the memory location from any block and any time while the program is running.
Also note that it is a good practice that after you have done with the allocated memory block, free
it to save from memory leaks. Once you free the memory, you can't access that block again.
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