I'm trying to figure out how to allocate a block of memory in a function and pass back a pointer to that block through one of the arguments. This is a C program. I seem to be having some trouble. Here's the code:
void foo(char *ptr)
{
if (!(ptr = malloc(size)))
printf("error");
/* code here */
printf("buffer address: %i\n", (int)buffer);
}
int main()
{
char *ptr;
ptr = NULL;
foo(ptr);
printf("buffer address: %i\n", (int)buffer);
}
And the result is:
buffer address: 142385160
buffer address: 0
but I was expecting something like:
buffer address: 142385160
buffer address: 142385160
What am I doing wrong?
buffer
declared to be? What changes it betweenmain
andfoo
?ptr
when he saidbuffer
and that it was just a copy-paste error that the original name was preserved. @Larry - Some have noted it, but the highest answer still makes the mistake, so I want to note that instead ofprintf("%i", (int)ptr)
you should useprintf("%p", ptr)
- the"%p"
conversion is designed for pointers. Specificallyvoid *
pointers, but I don't think the cast tovoid *
is strictly necessary.