strcat_s, wcscat_s, _mbscat_s, _mbscat_s_l

Appends a string. These versions of strcat, wcscat, _mbscat have security enhancements, as described in Security features in the CRT.

Important

_mbscat_s and _mbscat_s_l cannot be used in applications that execute in the Windows Runtime. For more information, see CRT functions not supported in Universal Windows Platform apps.

Syntax

errno_t strcat_s(
   char *strDestination,
   size_t numberOfElements,
   const char *strSource
);
errno_t wcscat_s(
   wchar_t *strDestination,
   size_t numberOfElements,
   const wchar_t *strSource
);
errno_t _mbscat_s(
   unsigned char *strDestination,
   size_t numberOfElements,
   const unsigned char *strSource
);
errno_t _mbscat_s_l(
   unsigned char *strDestination,
   size_t numberOfElements,
   const unsigned char *strSource,
   _locale_t locale
);
template <size_t size>
errno_t strcat_s(
   char (&strDestination)[size],
   const char *strSource
); // C++ only
template <size_t size>
errno_t wcscat_s(
   wchar_t (&strDestination)[size],
   const wchar_t *strSource
); // C++ only
template <size_t size>
errno_t _mbscat_s(
   unsigned char (&strDestination)[size],
   const unsigned char *strSource
); // C++ only
template <size_t size>
errno_t _mbscat_s_l(
   unsigned char (&strDestination)[size],
   const unsigned char *strSource,
   _locale_t locale
); // C++ only

Parameters

strDestination
Null-terminated destination string buffer.

numberOfElements
Size of the destination string buffer.

strSource
Null-terminated source string buffer.

locale
Locale to use.

Return value

Zero if successful; an error code on failure.

Error conditions

strDestination numberOfElements strSource Return value Contents of strDestination
NULL or unterminated any any EINVAL not modified
any any NULL EINVAL strDestination[0] set to 0
any 0, or too small any ERANGE strDestination[0] set to 0

Remarks

The strcat_s function appends strSource to strDestination and terminates the resulting string with a null character. The initial character of strSource overwrites the terminating null character of strDestination. The behavior of strcat_s is undefined if the source and destination strings overlap.

The second parameter is the total size of the buffer, not the remaining size:

char buf[16];
strcpy_s(buf, 16, "Start");
strcat_s(buf, 16, " End");               // Correct
strcat_s(buf, 16 - strlen(buf), " End"); // Incorrect

wcscat_s and _mbscat_s are wide-character and multibyte-character versions of strcat_s. The arguments and return value of wcscat_s are wide-character strings. The arguments and return value of _mbscat_s are multibyte-character strings. These three functions behave identically otherwise.

If strDestination is a null pointer, or isn't null-terminated, or if strSource is a NULL pointer, or if the destination string is too small, the invalid parameter handler is invoked, as described in Parameter validation. If execution is allowed to continue, these functions return EINVAL and set errno to EINVAL.

The versions of functions that have the _l suffix have the same behavior, but use the locale parameter that's passed in instead of the current locale. For more information, see Locale.

In C++, using these functions is simplified by template overloads; the overloads can infer buffer length automatically (eliminating the need to specify a size argument) and they can automatically replace older, non-secure functions with their newer, secure counterparts. For more information, see Secure template overloads.

The debug library versions of these functions first fill the buffer with 0xFE. To disable this behavior, use _CrtSetDebugFillThreshold.

By default, this function's global state is scoped to the application. To change this behavior, see Global state in the CRT.

Generic-text routine mappings

TCHAR.H routine _UNICODE and _MBCS not defined _MBCS defined _UNICODE defined
_tcscat_s strcat_s _mbscat_s wcscat_s

Requirements

Routine Required header
strcat_s <string.h>
wcscat_s <string.h> or <wchar.h>
_mbscat_s <mbstring.h>

For more compatibility information, see Compatibility.

Example

See the code example in strcpy_s, wcscpy_s, _mbscpy_s.

See also

String manipulation
strncat, _strncat_l, wcsncat, _wcsncat_l, _mbsncat, _mbsncat_l
strncmp, wcsncmp, _mbsncmp, _mbsncmp_l
strncpy, _strncpy_l, wcsncpy, _wcsncpy_l, _mbsncpy, _mbsncpy_l
_strnicmp, _wcsnicmp, _mbsnicmp, _strnicmp_l, _wcsnicmp_l, _mbsnicmp_l
strrchr, wcsrchr, _mbsrchr, _mbsrchr_l
strspn, wcsspn, _mbsspn, _mbsspn_l