memmove
, wmemmove
Moves one buffer to another. More secure versions of these functions are available; see memmove_s
, wmemmove_s
.
Syntax
void *memmove(
void *dest,
const void *src,
size_t count
);
wchar_t *wmemmove(
wchar_t *dest,
const wchar_t *src,
size_t count
);
Parameters
dest
Destination object.
src
Source object.
count
Number of bytes (memmove
) or characters (wmemmove
) to copy.
Return value
The value of dest
.
Remarks
Copies count
bytes (memmove
) or characters (wmemmove
) from src
to dest
. If some portions of the source and the destination regions overlap, both functions ensure that the original source bytes in the overlapping region are copied before being overwritten.
Security Note Make sure that the destination buffer is large enough to accommodate the number of moved characters. For more information, see Avoiding buffer overruns.
The memmove
and wmemmove
functions are only deprecated if the constant _CRT_SECURE_DEPRECATE_MEMORY
is defined before the #include
statement, as shown in the following example:
#define _CRT_SECURE_DEPRECATE_MEMORY
#include <string.h>
or
#define _CRT_SECURE_DEPRECATE_MEMORY
#include <wchar.h>
Requirements
Routine | Required header |
---|---|
memmove |
<string.h> |
wmemmove |
<wchar.h> |
For more compatibility information, see Compatibility.
Example
// crt_memcpy.c
// Illustrate overlapping copy: memmove
// always handles it correctly; memcpy may handle
// it correctly.
//
#include <memory.h>
#include <string.h>
#include <stdio.h>
char str1[7] = "aabbcc";
int main( void )
{
printf( "The string: %s\n", str1 );
memcpy( str1 + 2, str1, 4 );
printf( "New string: %s\n", str1 );
strcpy_s( str1, sizeof(str1), "aabbcc" ); // reset string
printf( "The string: %s\n", str1 );
memmove( str1 + 2, str1, 4 );
printf( "New string: %s\n", str1 );
}
The string: aabbcc
New string: aaaabb
The string: aabbcc
New string: aaaabb
See also
Buffer manipulation
_memccpy
memcpy
, wmemcpy
strcpy
, wcscpy
, _mbscpy
strncpy
, _strncpy_l
, wcsncpy
, _wcsncpy_l
, _mbsncpy
, _mbsncpy_l