Given the following short example
FILE *p = fopen("foo.txt", "r");
FILE f = *p;
int i;
fscanf(p, "%i", &i); // works just fine
fscanf(&f, "%i", &i); // segmentation fault
I have read a little about FILE
, FILE *
as well as the actual struct type _IO_FILE
, but it isn't really clear to me what is causing the segmentation fault in the second call to fscanf
.
So aside from p
and &f
containing different addresses and unless this is involved (which I think it is), what is the difference between &f
and p
in this context?