Hi! In the following function, past_end is a pointer to one-past-the-end of the array. Holding such a pointer is legal in C. I use it as a sentinel value that helps (1) avoid overrunning the buffer, and (2) detect truncation. I mark it as having a size of [0], which clearly states that it can't be dereferenced (and as you can see, I don't). /* * This function copies an unterminated string into a string. * - It never overruns the dest buffer. * - It can be chained, to concatenate strings. * - It detects truncation. * - Truncation only needs to be tested once after all concatenations. * - The name is self-documenting, compared to its alternative: strncat(3). */ char * ustr2stpe(char *dst, const char *restrict src, size_t n, char past_end[0]) { bool trunc; char *end; ptrdiff_t len; if (dst == past_end) return past_end; trunc = false; len = strnlen(src, n); if (len > past_end - dst - 1) { len = past_end - dst - 1; trunc = true; } end = mempcpy(dst, src, len); *end = '\0'; return trunc ? past_end : end; } If I compile the code above, GCC considers the function definition to be fine. However, at call site, it always warns: #define nitems(arr) (sizeof((arr)) / sizeof((arr)[0])) int main(void) { char pre[4] = "pre."; char *post = ".post"; char *src = "some-long-body.post"; char dest[100]; char *p, *past_end; past_end = dest + nitems(dest); p = dest; p = ustr2stpe(p, pre, nitems(pre), past_end); p = ustr2stpe(p, src, strlen(src) - strlen(post), past_end); p = ustr2stpe(p, "", 0, past_end); if (p == past_end) fprintf(stderr, "truncation\n"); puts(dest); // "pre.some-long-body" } $ cc -Wall -Wextra ustr2stpe.c ustr2stpe.c: In function ‘main’: ustr2stpe.c:43:13: warning: ‘ustr2stpe’ accessing 1 byte in a region of size 0 [-Wstringop-overflow=] 43 | p = ustr2stpe(p, pre, nitems(pre), past_end); | ^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ustr2stpe.c:43:13: note: referencing argument 4 of type ‘char[0]’ ustr2stpe.c:10:1: note: in a call to function ‘ustr2stpe’ 10 | ustr2stpe(char *dst, const char *restrict src, size_t n, char past_end[0]) | ^~~~~~~~~ ustr2stpe.c:44:13: warning: ‘ustr2stpe’ accessing 1 byte in a region of size 0 [-Wstringop-overflow=] 44 | p = ustr2stpe(p, src, strlen(src) - strlen(post), past_end); | ^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ustr2stpe.c:44:13: note: referencing argument 4 of type ‘char[0]’ ustr2stpe.c:10:1: note: in a call to function ‘ustr2stpe’ 10 | ustr2stpe(char *dst, const char *restrict src, size_t n, char past_end[0]) | ^~~~~~~~~ ustr2stpe.c:45:13: warning: ‘ustr2stpe’ accessing 1 byte in a region of size 0 [-Wstringop-overflow=] 45 | p = ustr2stpe(p, "", 0, past_end); | ^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ustr2stpe.c:45:13: note: referencing argument 4 of type ‘char[0]’ ustr2stpe.c:10:1: note: in a call to function ‘ustr2stpe’ 10 | ustr2stpe(char *dst, const char *restrict src, size_t n, char past_end[0]) | ^~~~~~~~~ ustr2stpe.c:43:13: warning: ‘ustr2stpe’ accessing 1 byte in a region of size 0 [-Wstringop-overflow=] 43 | p = ustr2stpe(p, pre, nitems(pre), past_end); | ^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ustr2stpe.c:43:13: note: referencing argument 4 of type ‘char[0]’ ustr2stpe.c:10:1: note: in a call to function ‘ustr2stpe’ 10 | ustr2stpe(char *dst, const char *restrict src, size_t n, char past_end[0]) | ^~~~~~~~~ ustr2stpe.c:44:13: warning: ‘ustr2stpe’ accessing 1 byte in a region of size 0 [-Wstringop-overflow=] 44 | p = ustr2stpe(p, src, strlen(src) - strlen(post), past_end); | ^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ustr2stpe.c:44:13: note: referencing argument 4 of type ‘char[0]’ ustr2stpe.c:10:1: note: in a call to function ‘ustr2stpe’ 10 | ustr2stpe(char *dst, const char *restrict src, size_t n, char past_end[0]) | ^~~~~~~~~ ustr2stpe.c:45:13: warning: ‘ustr2stpe’ accessing 1 byte in a region of size 0 [-Wstringop-overflow=] 45 | p = ustr2stpe(p, "", 0, past_end); | ^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ustr2stpe.c:45:13: note: referencing argument 4 of type ‘char[0]’ ustr2stpe.c:10:1: note: in a call to function ‘ustr2stpe’ 10 | ustr2stpe(char *dst, const char *restrict src, size_t n, char past_end[0]) | ^~~~~~~~~ The warnings are invalid. While it's true that I'm referencing a pointer of size 0, it's false that I'm "accessing 1 byte" in that region. I guess this is all about the bogus design of 'static' in ISO C, where you can have an array parameter of size 0, which is very useful in cases like this one. Cheers, Alex --