The standard specifies, at §2.14.7.1, that:
The pointer literal is the keyword nullptr
. It is a prvalue of type std::nullptr_t
. [ Note: std::nullptr_t
is a distinct type that is neither a pointer type nor a pointer to member type; rather, a prvalue of this type is a null pointer constant and can be converted to a null pointer value or null member pointer value. —endnote]
The only prvalue of type nullptr_t
is nullptr
which is then convertible to other pointer type following the rules specified in §4.10 and §4.11.
Other integer literals can be converted to a value of type std::nullptr_t
as per §4.10.1:
A null pointer constant is an integer literal (2.14.2) with value zero or a prvalue of type std::nullptr_t
.
Therefore you can use an interger literal with value zero or nullptr
.
Specifically:
0
0u
, 0U
0l
, 0L
0ul
, 0uL
, 0Ul
, 0UL
0ll
, 0LL
0ull
, 0uLL
, 0ULL
nullptr
NULL
I might be missing some cases, so fell free to correct me.
std::nullptr_t
reference.std::nullpr_t()
is a valid expression. Can't see why not, so that would be another option.