You can allocate an array of arbitrary length with malloc() (it's like "new" in Java), and make it grow or shrink with realloc().
You have to remember to free the memory with free() as in C there is not garbarage collector.
Check: http://www.gnu.org/software/libc/manual/html_node/Memory-Allocation.html#Memory-Allocation
Edit:
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <string.h>
int main(){
char * string;
// Lets say we have a initial string of 8 chars
string = malloc(sizeof(char) * 9); // Nine because we need 8 chars plus one \0 to terminate the string
strcpy(string, "12345678");
// Now we need to expand the string to 10 chars (plus one for \0)
string = realloc(string, sizeof(char) * 11);
// you can check if string is different of NULL...
// Now we append some chars
strcat(string, "90");
// ...
// at some point you need to free the memory if you don't want a memory leak
free(string);
// ...
return 0;
}
Edit 2:
This is the sample for allocate and expand an array of pointers to chars (an array of strings)
#include <stdlib.h>
int main(){
// Array of strings
char ** messages;
char * pointer_to_string_0 = "Hello";
char * pointer_to_string_1 = "World";
unsigned size = 0;
// Initial size one
messages = malloc(sizeof(char *)); // Note I allocate space for 1 pointer to char
size = 1;
// ...
messages[0] = pointer_to_string_0;
// We expand to contain 2 strings (2 pointers really)
size++;
messages = realloc(messages, sizeof(char *) * size);
messages[1] = pointer_to_string_1;
// ...
free(messages);
// ...
return 0;
}