Considering the example at http://c-faq.com/misc/hexio.html, what is the reason to have an additional pointer to a 'static' character buffer? Why can't we get away with retbuf
?
2 Answers
Without the static
keyword, the buffer would be allocated on the stack -- and deallocated by the time the function returns to the caller.
Using static
ensures the buffer is valid after the function returns.
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I thought he was asking why
p
was needed, rather than justretbuf
. Jan 12, 2011 at 7:16 -
You need a pointer so you can store a changing address. If you just had retbuf
, you would have to design the function to use a changing index variable. E.g.:
int ind = sizeof(retbuf)-1;
retbuf[ind] = '\0';
etc.
Note that arrays are not pointers. An array is a fixed-size region of memory. A pointer is an address.
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Thanks for input, but I still don't get it completely. Consider this snippet form the link above: static char retbuf[33]; char *p; p = &retbuf[sizeof(retbuf)-1]; Why do we need to keep additional pointer 'p' to a 'retbuf'? If we fill in the 'retbuf' and then return it from the function ('return retbuf'), it will always point at the very first element of the buffer, am I wrong here?– MarkJan 12, 2011 at 23:56
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@Mark, first,
p
does not always end up equal toretbuf
's first element at the end of the function. As a simple example, ifnum
is 0,p
will stay equal toretbuf + sizeof(retbuf) - 1
. Second, p is used during the function to keep track of which location to write to. Jan 13, 2011 at 0:07 -
Oh, I see it now. I should have been more careful when looking at the code. Thank you Matthew!– MarkJan 13, 2011 at 0:13
static
keyword, or why there is a pointerchar* p
pointing toretbuf
?