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I am learning C.. coming from a C# background I find most of it very easy to transition over to.. pointers however are proving quite troublesome.. I have created a small test app (see below) for concatenating 2 strings via pointers. I am getting this error:

error: invalid type argument of unary '*' (have 'int')

How do I fix this?

void concatTest();

int main()
{
    concatTest();

    system("PAUSE");
    return 0;
}

void concatTest()
{
    char string1[20], string2[20], string3[40];
    char *ptr1, *ptr2, *ptr3;
    ptr1 = &string1[0];
    ptr2 = &string2[0];
    ptr3 = &string3[0];
    int i;

    printf("You need to enter 2 strings.. each of which is no more than 20 chars in length: \n");

    printf("Enter string #1: \n");
    scanf("%s", string1);

    printf("Enter string #2: \n");
    scanf("%s", string2);

    int len1 = strlen(string1);
    int len2 = strlen(string2);

    for (i = 0; i < len1; i++)
    {
        *ptr3[i] = *ptr1[i];
    }
    for (i = len1; i < len1 + len2; i++)
    {
        *ptr3[i] = *ptr2[i];
    }
    //TODO: show concatenated string on console
}
2
  • You should use scanf("%20s", string1) here. Jul 15, 2012 at 23:39
  • Your second loop is incorrect, you need to start copying from the beginning of the second string (but still append to the end of the final string of course).
    – Neil
    Jul 15, 2012 at 23:50

2 Answers 2

2

ptr1[i] has already dereferenced the array. There is no need to use * as well.

[However, even if you fix that, your code is still broken; you haven't taken null-terminators into account.]

1
-2
the name of array as a point
ptr1  = string1; ptr1 point at the array string1,so ptr1[i] is just like string1[i]

ptr1  = string1;
ptr2  = string2;
ptr3  = string3;
2
  • Adding some text might help us to understand what you want to say!!
    – Swanand
    Jul 16, 2012 at 5:23
  • very poor comment, be mor specific and clear with your comment
    – ifixthat
    Jul 16, 2012 at 12:48

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