In C, NULL is defined as (void *)0 whereas in C++ it is 0. Why is it so?
In C I can understand that if NULL is not typecast to (void *) then compilers may/may not generate warning. Other than this, is there any reason?
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In C++, the null pointer is defined by the ISO specification (§4.10/1) as
This is why in C++ you can write
In C, this rule is similar, but is a bit different (§6.3.2.3/3):
Consequently, both
and
are legal. However, my guess is that the
produce a compiler warning on most systems. In C++, this wouldn't be legal because you can't implicitly convert a
However, this leads to issues because the code
is legal C++. Because of this and the ensuing confusion (and another case, shown later), C++11 now has a keyword
This doesn't have any of the above problems. The other advantage of
If I call
It's equivalent to
which calls
And it will call the Similarly, suppose that I have a
However, this doesn't compile, because the template system treats
This is ugly and somewhat defeats the purpose of the template system. To fix this, I can use
And since Hope this helps! |
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In C, In C++, the rules for null pointer constants are different. In particular, |
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The reason C++ uses just Any other use other than with MFPs would seem to allow |
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The C language was created to make it easier to program microprocessors. A C pointer is used to store the address of data in memory. A way was needed to represent that a pointer had no valid value. The address zero was chosen since all microprocessors used that address for booting up. Since it couldn't be used for anything else zero was a good choice to represent a pointer with no valid value. C++ is backward compatible with C so it's inherited that convention. The requirement of casting zero when used as a pointer is only a recent add on. Later generations of C wanted to have more rigor (and hopefully fewer errors) so they started being more pedantic about syntax. |
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void*to any pointer type, and in C++ you cannot. – asveikau Aug 11 '11 at 17:30