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I've read those articles http://eli.thegreenplace.net/2010/01/11/pointers-to-arrays-in-c/ http://eli.thegreenplace.net/2010/04/06/pointers-vs-arrays-in-c-part-2d/

I want some further explanation about what happens.

int joe[] = {1, 2, 3, 4};

void test(int (*p)[4])

This is a pointer to an array which is different from

void test(int *d);

which is going to be a pointer to the first element of the array passed, or a copy of another pointer. Can I do?

*p = joe //I guess not, I'm obtaining the array passed, and I'm trying to reassign it (which can't be done)
d = joe //I guess not, but I would like to know what would happen to d
*d = joe //Same as above
d = &joe //I'm giving to d the address of joe, what will it be?

Which of those are correct and which of those are wrong, and why.

In the article about 2d arrays (which actually are just 1d array), he wrote that:

void bar(int arr[2][3], int m, int n)
void bar(int arr[][3], int m, int n)
void bar(int (*arr)[3], int m, int n)

are all correct.

1) Question:

void bar(int arr[][3], int m, int n)
void bar(int arr*[3], int m, int n)

Are the same? If not what is the difference between them?

2) question:

 void bar(int arr[][3], int m, int n)
 void bar(int (*arr)[3], int m, int n)

What is the difference between those, and why do they both works?

I would really appreciate a detailed explanation of what happens behind, I hope the questions are clears.

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    You can enter it into a .c file and compile it. The compiler will tell, whether it is correct or not. Nov 23, 2012 at 10:55
  • Immediately after second code block: "which is going to be a pointer to the first element of the array passed..." this is not accurate. d is a pointer variable (in this case a parameter variable as well). it holds an address. Whether that address references the foot of an array, a single int, or even NULL, you can NOT conclusively say it is a pointer to the first element of an array.
    – WhozCraig
    Nov 23, 2012 at 11:01
  • @WhozCraig if I pass to it this: int i[2] = {0,1}, it is going to be a pointer to the first element of i.
    – AR89
    Nov 23, 2012 at 11:11
  • Yes, if you pass it. Just looking at the prototype without knowing what is passed from the caller side, you cannot deduce anything beyond that you have been given an address. This was effectively my point. You, the caller, can know it is an array, but the code in the function (the callee) has nothing to enforce that it is, in fact, an array.
    – WhozCraig
    Nov 23, 2012 at 11:13
  • int (*p)[4] is an array of pointers not pointer to an array Nov 23, 2012 at 11:23

1 Answer 1

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Function parameter declaration

void bar(int arr[]); /* this is a pointer to int */

is equivalent to

void bar(int arr[5]); /* this is a pointer to int, compiler just ignores 5 */

is equivalent to

void bar(int *arr); /* this is a pointer to int */

In all cases a pointer to an int or pointer to an array of ints is given to bar(). Note especially pointer. This means inside bar(), sizeof(arr) will always be sizeof(int*), never sizeof(int[5]) or sizeof(int[3]) for example.

The rest, including multi dimensional arrays, follows from this simple rule.

Question 1)

  • The compiler would tell you, that void bar(int arr*[3], ...) is invalid.
  • Moving * to the front would give void bar(int *arr[3], ...), which is an array of int* and translates to a pointer to a pointer: int **arr.
  • This is different from void bar(int arr[][3], ...), which is a pointer to an array of 3 ints or pointer to a multi dimensional array with the second dimension being 3.

Question 2)

  • There's no difference between these two. Both are pointer to an array of 3 ints as in question 1 above.

Further reading from google: interpret c declaration

And one last advice: don't be shy and use the compiler. It will tell you whether your code is valid or not.

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    An important note about this: You loose the size information for the array, either way you pass it. So it's not possible to do sizeof(array) to get the size of the array. Nov 23, 2012 at 11:04
  • Also important, the leading subscript magnitude on a naked array parameter is effectively ignored. ar[4][5] is the same as ar[][5] as far as the compiler is concerned. Just as ar[n] is effectively ar[].
    – WhozCraig
    Nov 23, 2012 at 11:11
  • void bar (int (*arr)[4]), this is a pointer to an array, what is the difference between this one and yours?
    – AR89
    Nov 23, 2012 at 11:14
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    @AR89 There's no difference between parameters int (*arr)[4] and int arr[][4]. Nov 23, 2012 at 11:29
  • 1
    @AR89 When you have a multi dimensional array, declare it as such. Use int arr[][3] or int (*arr)[3], but not int *arr. You can of course interpret it as arr[i*3+j], but I don't recommend it. Better use arr[i][j]! Nov 23, 2012 at 11:49

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