I try use a pointer to a constant integer number in C:
void *p = NULL;
p = (int *) 1;
printf("p=%d\n", *(int *)p);
but I got a segment fault.....
I cannot figure out how a pointer to a constant number in C w/o declaring a variable.
You are not taking the pointer to a constant but you are converting the constant to a pointer. You should do something like:
const int one = 1;
const int *p;
p = &one;
You cannot however do something like:
p = &1;
since literal constants haven't a memory location.
*(int *)p
You are derefrencing p
, which is a pointer that has a value of 1
. It's unlikely to be a valid address, segmentation fault is not a surprise.
P.S: p
is not a pointer to const
integer, it has a value of a constant integer.
p = (int *) 1;
does not set the pointer p
to point to a memory location with value 1
. This sets the value of the pointer to 1, i.e, sets the pointer to point to the memory location with address 1
.
try this:
void *p = NULL;
const int num = 1;
p = (int*)(&num);
printf("p=%d\n", *((int *)p));