As per the title. I see certain people declaring a pointer as char* s
, and others declaring it as char *s
. Also I see some people doing, say, s = (char*) malloc(5)
instead of doing *s = malloc(5)
. Is there a difference between that as well? Apologies if this question is repeated, I understand the concept of pointers, but have great difficulty understanding the syntax used to represent pointers in C.
1 Answer
There's no difference.
A sort of convention has grown up: folk like to think of char*
as being the type for s
(which is, of course, a pointer); this can make source code more readable.
But really char
is the type, and *s
the variable. You can see this by writing
char* s, t;
s
is a pointer, but t
is a plain-old char
. If you wanted both s
and t
to be pointers, you'd have to write
char *s, *t;
or the obfuscated
char* s, *t;
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1
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I like to think 'char*' as the type, and 's' as the variable name, +1 :D– NetwaveMar 7, 2016 at 11:18
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@MartinJames: It's a dangerous question to answer (i) possibly a duplicate and (ii) borderline opinion-based. Mar 7, 2016 at 11:20
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Saying that
char
is the type*s
is the variable isn't really sensible either. It doesn't make sense forvoid *p
,sizeof (T *)
, etc. I think it's better to say that*
binding with the variable name is a quirk of the C grammar rather than trying to rationalize it. Mar 7, 2016 at 11:21
malloc
*s = malloc(5)
would be wrong, unlesss
ischar**
. Andmalloc()
shouldn't be cast since it's not needed.char* s = null;
andchar *t = null;
,s == t
will return true?NULL
, instead ofnull
, then yes.