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I'm looking through some code for learning purposes. I'm working through this portion of code.

// e.g. const unsigned char data={0x1,0x7C ... }
unsigned char buf[40];
memset(buf,0,40);
buf[0] = 0x52;
memcpy(buf+1, data, length); // What does buf+1 do in this situation?

On the last line where memcpy is called what does buf+1 do? buf is a character array, so what does +1 do to it?

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4 Answers

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In C, every array name is a pointer, so buf here also means the pointer which point to buf[0].Then "buf+1" means "buf[1]"'s address.

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Ah cool. I had a hunch that was what it was doing, but the syntax did make sense to me. Thanks for clearing that up for me! – macinjosh Sep 8 at 1:54
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More correctly, if an array is used in an expression where it isn't the subject of the sizeof or & operator, it evaluates to a pointer to its first element. – caf Sep 8 at 1:56
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buf+1 is equivalent to &(buf[1])

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buf+1 is the same as &(buf[1]). In other words, it returns a pointer to the 2nd (index 1) character of buf.

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Only 29 seconds too slow :P – rpetrich Sep 8 at 1:53
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Pointer Arithmetic (Stack Overflow)

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