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Q: Segmentation fault when using qsort to sort a structure

Mario MateasI made a C program that reads an external text file and takes out the number of decimals and the average of the numbers on every line, and then sorts the lines based on their number of decimals. If the number of decimals is equal, the lines will be sorted based on their average of the numbers. Th...

Have you tried running your code line by line in a debugger while monitoring the values of all variables, in order to determine at which point your program stops behaving as intended? If you did not try this, then you probably want to read this: What is a debugger and how can it help me diagnose problems? You may also want to read this: How to debug small programs?.
@AndreasWenzel whenever I try to hit "debug" in VS Code, it opens a new tab containing a settings.json file. No debug console
This is wrong: readLines(ln, f);. In C, all function parameters are passed by value. So there is no way that the function can change the value of ln to return the allocated memory.
@MarioMateas: You might want to Google for "how to install c debugger in visual studio code". You'll certainly need to learn to use a debugger if you want to do any serious programming.
@kaylum should I try using lineNumber*sizeof(ln)? Thought that just mentioning the size of the struct would work, as in sorting an integer array a[], by only using sizeof(int) as the second param in qsort
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sizeof(ln) should be sizeof(*ln). The former gives the size of the pointer whereas the latter gives the size of the struct. The latter is what qsort needs.
@kaylum still receiving a segmentation fault
Did you see my comment regarding readLines being wrong? For further help please post complete code. It is difficult to debug incomplete code snippets. Please see How to create a Minimal, Reproducible Example.
Memory allocation is the key to the issue but you haven't included it !
@kaylum edited the post and added the readLines() function. The one that might cause the problem. Though, when I printed the data from the ln array, it worked. The problems occured when dealing with the sorting of it
@John3136 also added the last function, the one that contains realloc()
when I printed the data from the ln array, it worked. Printed it where? Inside the function? Do you understand why it is wrong? Inside the function is ok but not outside the function. You can't set a function parameter and expect the caller to see the result. See: Changing address contained by pointer using function.
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@kaylum ohhh, got it right now. You mean, the data of the struct array ln[] is only inserted in the function, but outside the function, the memory's still not allocated
@kaylum am I right?
The memory is still allocated. But the calling function has no reference to it and cannot access it (so that's a memory leak as the memory is lost).
@kaylum And what should I exactly change to the function call? I use the address of ln as a parameter
@MarioMateas: Note that this error would have been visibile in a debugger, if you had examined the arguments when calling the function qsort. By not ever using a debugger, you are making life harder for yourself.
I gave you a link that explains what to do. Please read it. something like: int readLines(struct line **ln, FILE *f) { *ln = realloc() } and call with readLines(&ln, f);
@AndreasWenzel I mean, I already have the debugger installed, if you're referring to the C/C++ extension in VS Code. But when I hit debug, it just opens a settings.json file
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@MarioMateas: You must pass ln by reference to the function readLines, instead of passing it by value. The link I provided in the previous sentence is from a C tutorial. It describes the same thing as the question linked by user "kaylum".
@MarioMateas: Unfortunately, I am not familiar with Visual Studio Code, so I cannot help you in configuring the debugger. However, I can tell you that according to this link, the Microsoft C/C++ extension does not include a debugger. But the page I linked contains a link labeled "Debugging" which provided further information on how to set up a debugger in Visual Studio Code.
@AndreasWenzel but that's what I did. The parameter of readLines() is a pointer to a struct line, while the value sent is the address of the array ln
@MarioMateas: You are passing the pointer itself by value, not by reference. You are only passing what the pointer points to by reference. However, since it is not pointing to anything, you are passing nothing by reference.
@MarioMateas: The line ln = realloc(ln, (i+1)*sizeof(ln)); in the function readLines will not modify the pointer ln in the function main. It will only modify the pointer ln in the function readLines, i.e. that function's local copy. This is because the pointer is passed by value, not by reference. If you want to pass a pointer by reference, you must pass a pointer to a pointer, i.e. a double pointer. As user "kaylum" already pointed out, you can use the following function declaration for this: int readLines(struct line **ln, FILE *f).
@MarioMateas: If you pass the pointer by reference, as described above, then you can access the variable ln in the function main also from the function readLines. In order to access the variable from the function readLines, you must dereference the double pointer once, by writing *ln.
@AndreasWenzel Do I also add * every time I'm using ln in the readLines function?
@MarioMateas: Yes. Actually, you might want to rename the variable ln in the function readLines, to make clear it is a double pointer. For example, you might want to rename it pp_ln (p stands for pointer). That way, you will have to write *pp_ln every time you want to access the variable ln in the function main.
@MarioMateas: Many programmers find double pointers (pointers to pointers) hard to understand at first. Therefore, don't be surprised if you find this all a bit confusing. But once you understand them, you will find that they are very powerful.

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