2

New to pointers and unsafe world in C#. I was going through getting memory address of variables via pointers, move things around a bit here and there etc; basically learning.

static unsafe void M()
{
    var i = 1;
    var p = &i; //gets memory location of variable i here

    //how do I write to location p, say a value of 100?
}

I was wondering if there is a way to write to a specific location as well? It helps a great deal to see what's going around if I can read and write at the same time.

No practical purposes, just learning. Or is it not possible with C#?

3 Answers 3

1

You need to dereference the pointer with the * operator. ex:

*p = 100;
0
1

Like this

*p = 100;

Console.WriteLine(i); // prints 100;
1

You need to deference it.

Here's a LINQPad snippet:

int i = 1;

unsafe
{
    var p = &i;

    *p = 100;
}

i.Dump();

This outputs "100", as expected.

2
  • Do you know what's the difference between your answer and this approach Marshal.WriteInt32(new IntPtr(p), 100)? Both works fine.
    – nawfal
    May 14, 2013 at 19:53
  • 1
    @nawfal, Marshal contains a whole host of methods for working with unmanaged memory and if you check the MSDN you'll notice that they're not marked as unsafe.
    – Moo-Juice
    May 14, 2013 at 19:58

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