- strcat( ) function in C language concatenates two given strings. It concatenates source string at the end of destination string. Syntax for strcat( ) function is given below.
char * strcat ( char * destination, const char * source );
- Example :
strcat ( str2, str1 ); - str1 is concatenated at the end of str2.
strcat ( str1, str2 ); - str2 is concatenated at the end of str1.
strcat ( str1, str2 ); - str2 is concatenated at the end of str1.
- As you know, each string in C is ended up with null character (‘\0′).
- In strcat( ) operation, null character of destination string is overwritten by source string’s first character and null character is added at the end of new destination string which is created after strcat( ) operation.
Example program for strcat( ) function in C:
- In this program, two strings “computerscience” and “C tutorial” are concatenated using strcat( ) function and result is displayed as “C tutorial computerscience”.
#include <stdio.h>
#include <string.h>
int main( )
{
char source[ ] = " computerscience" ;
char target[ ]= " C tutorial" ;
printf ( "\nSource string = %s", source ) ;
printf ( "\nTarget string = %s", target ) ;
strcat ( target, source ) ;
printf ( "\nTarget string after strcat( ) = %s", target ) ;
}
Output:
|
Source string = computerscience
Target string = C tutorial Target string after strcat( ) = C tutorial computerscience |
Other C String functions:
- String.h header file supports all the string functions in C language. All the string functions are given below.
| S.no |
String functions
|
Description
|
| 1 | strcat ( ) | Concatenates str2 at the end of str1. |
| 2 | strncat ( ) | appends a portion of string to another |
| 3 | strcpy ( ) | Copies str2 into str1 |
| 4 | strncpy ( ) | copies given number of characters of one string to another |
| 5 | strlen ( ) | gives the length of str1. |
| 6 | strcmp ( ) | Returns 0 if str1 is same as str2. Returns <0 if strl < str2. Returns >0 if str1 > str2. |
| 7 | strcmpi ( ) | Same as strcmp() function. But, this function negotiates case. “A” and “a” are treated as same. |
| 8 | strchr ( ) | Returns pointer to first occurrence of char in str1. |
| 9 | strrchr ( ) | last occurrence of given character in a string is found |
| 10 | strstr ( ) | Returns pointer to first occurrence of str2 in str1. |
| 11 | strrstr ( ) | Returns pointer to last occurrence of str2 in str1. |
| 12 | strdup ( ) | duplicates the string |
| 13 | strlwr ( ) | converts string to lowercase |
| 14 | strupr ( ) | converts string to uppercase |
| 15 | strrev ( ) | reverses the given string |
| 16 | strset ( ) | sets all character in a string to given character |
| 17 | strnset ( ) | It sets the portion of characters in a string to given character |
| 18 | strtok ( ) | tokenizing given string using delimiter |






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