Defined in header <stdlib.h> | ||
---|---|---|
void free( void* ptr ); |
Deallocates the space previously allocated by malloc()
, calloc()
, aligned_alloc
, (since C11) or realloc()
.
If ptr
is a null pointer, the function does nothing.
The behavior is undefined if the value of ptr
does not equal a value returned earlier by malloc()
, calloc()
, realloc()
, or aligned_alloc()
(since C11).
The behavior is undefined if the memory area referred to by ptr
has already been deallocated, that is, free()
or realloc()
has already been called with ptr
as the argument and no calls to malloc()
, calloc()
or realloc()
resulted in a pointer equal to ptr
afterwards.
The behavior is undefined if after free()
returns, an access is made through the pointer ptr
(unless another allocation function happened to result in a pointer value equal to ptr
).
A call to | (since C11) |
ptr | - | pointer to the memory to deallocate |
(none).
The function accepts (and does nothing with) the null pointer to reduce the amount of special-casing. Whether allocation succeeds or not, the pointer returned by an allocation function can be passed to free()
.
#include <stdlib.h> int main(void) { int *p1 = malloc(10*sizeof *p1); free(p1); // every allocated pointer must be freed int *p2 = calloc(10, sizeof *p2); int *p3 = realloc(p2, 1000*sizeof *p3); if(p3) // p3 not null means p2 was freed by realloc free(p3); else // p3 null means p2 was not freed free(p2); }
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