Questions tagged [pointer-arithmetic]
You can perform a limited number of arithmetic operations on pointers. These operations are: increment, decrement, addition, subtraction, comparison and assignment.
pointer-arithmetic
112
questions
1807
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With arrays, why is it the case that a[5] == 5[a]?
As Joel points out in Stack Overflow podcast #34, in C Programming Language (aka: K & R), there is mention of this property of arrays in C: a[5] == 5[a]
Joel says that it's because of pointer ...
65
votes
7
answers
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Pointer Arithmetic [closed]
Does anyone have any good articles or explanations (blogs, examples) for pointer arithmetic? Figure the audience is a bunch of Java programmers learning C and C++.
241
votes
10
answers
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Pointer arithmetic for void pointer in C
When a pointer to a particular type (say int, char, float, ..) is incremented, its value is increased by the size of that data type. If a void pointer which points to data of size x is incremented, ...
16
votes
7
answers
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C/C++: Pointer Arithmetic
I was reading a bit in Pointer Arithmetic, and I came upon 2 things I couldn't understand neither know it's use
address_expression - address_expression
and also
address_expression > ...
12
votes
2
answers
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views
Pointer Arithmetic In C
Consider the following code fragment:
int (*p)[3];
int (*q)[3];
q = p;
q++;
printf("%d, %d\n", q, p);
printf("%d\n", q-p);
I know that pointer arithmetic is intelligent, meaning that the operation ...
7
votes
1
answer
1k
views
Do pointers support "array style indexing"?
(Self-answered Q&A - this matter keeps popping up)
I assume that the reader is aware of how pointer arithmetic works.
int arr[3] = {1,2,3};
int* ptr = arr;
...
*(ptr + i) = value;
Teachers/C ...
132
votes
5
answers
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views
How to increment a pointer address and pointer's value?
Let us assume,
int *p;
int a = 100;
p = &a;
What will the following code actually do and how?
p++;
++p;
++*p;
++(*p);
++*(p);
*p++;
(*p)++;
*(p)++;
*++p;
*(++p);
I know, this is kind of messy in ...
22
votes
4
answers
7k
views
What is the result of NULL + int?
I have seen the following macro being used in OpenGL VBO implementations:
#define BUFFER_OFFSET(i) ((char *)NULL + (i))
//...
glNormalPointer(GL_FLOAT, 32, BUFFER_OFFSET(x));
Could you provide a ...
12
votes
2
answers
875
views
Is it UB to access a subobject by adding byte offset to the address of the enclosing object?
Here's an example:
#include <cstddef>
#include <iostream>
struct A
{
char padding[7];
int x;
};
constexpr int offset = offsetof(A, x);
int main()
{
A a;
a.x = 42;
...
6
votes
1
answer
3k
views
Address canonical form and pointer arithmetic
On AMD64 compliant architectures, addresses need to be in canonical form before being dereferenced.
From the Intel manual, section 3.3.7.1:
In 64-bit mode, an address is considered to be in ...
22
votes
1
answer
1k
views
Is the "one-past-the-end" pointer of a non-array type a valid concept in C++?
The C++ standard [sec 5.7] says:
If both the pointer operand and the result point to elements of the same array object, or one past
the last element of the array object, the evaluation shall not ...
9
votes
3
answers
24k
views
Pointer/Address difference [duplicate]
Why is the difference between the two addresses wrong?
http://codepad.org/NGDqFWjJ
#include<stdio.h>
int main()
{
int i = 10, j = 20;
int *p = &i;
int *q = &j;
int c = p - q;...
21
votes
3
answers
16k
views
Order of operations for dereference and bracket-ref in C
If I do *ptr[x], is that equivalent to *(ptr[x]), or (*ptr)[x]?
20
votes
4
answers
13k
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Access element beyond the end of an array in C
I've been reading K & R's book on C, and found that pointer arithmetic in C allows access to one element beyond the end of an array. I know C allows to do almost anything with memory but I just ...
3
votes
8
answers
10k
views
Pointer arithmetic when void has unknown size [closed]
In Visual Studio C++ version 9 (and probably other versions too), the following code:
int a = sizeof(void);
void const *b = static_cast<void const *>("hello world");
b += 6;
Generates these ...
11
votes
2
answers
4k
views
C null pointer arithmetic
I noticed this warning from Clang:
warning: performing pointer arithmetic on a null pointer
has undefined behavior [-Wnull-pointer-arithmetic]
In details, it is this code which triggers this warning:
...
27
votes
7
answers
2k
views
What is the rationale for limitations on pointer arithmetic or comparison?
In C/C++, addition or subtraction on pointer is defined only if the resulting pointer lies within the original pointed complete object. Moreover, comparison of two pointers can only be performed if ...
136
votes
3
answers
9k
views
How does this piece of code determine array size without using sizeof( )?
Going through some C interview questions, I've found a question stating "How to find the size of an array in C without using the sizeof operator?", with the following solution. It works, but I cannot ...
13
votes
5
answers
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views
C pointer arithmetic
Given this code:
int *p, *q;
p = (int *) 1000;
q = (int *) 2000;
What is q - p and how?
11
votes
4
answers
1k
views
Accessing struct data members via pointer arithmetic
If I have a simple tensor class like this
struct Tensor
{
double XX, XY, XZ;
double YX, YY, YZ;
double ZX, ZY, ZZ;
}
Is it undefined behavior to use pointer-arithmetic (see below) to ...
7
votes
4
answers
1k
views
Can we subtract NULL pointers?
Since pointer arithmetic is defined within the same array I'm in doubt if we can subtract NULL from another NULL. I'm concerned about the implementation of:
//first and second can both either be from ...
4
votes
1
answer
4k
views
How void pointer arithmetic is happening in GCC
int main()
{
int a;
void *p;
p = &a;
printf("%ld\n",(long)p);
p = p+1;
printf("%ld\n",(long)p);
}
In this program, p+1 is just incrementing the value of ...
39
votes
11
answers
12k
views
Accessing array values via pointer arithmetic vs. subscripting in C
I keep reading that, in C, using pointer arithmetic is generally faster than subscripting for array access. Is this true even with modern (supposedly-optimizing) compilers?
If so, is this still the ...
39
votes
2
answers
22k
views
Pointer arithmetic in Go
Considering you can (can't think of a great way to put it, but) manipulate pointers in Go, is it possible to perform pointer arithmetic like you would in C, say for iterating over an array? I know ...
15
votes
1
answer
942
views
Is it allowed to add a zero to a null pointer?
I know that pointer arithmetic is disallowed for null pointers. But imagine I have something like this:
class MyArray {
int *arrayBegin; // pointer to the first array item, NULL for an empty array
...
13
votes
2
answers
808
views
Is pointer arithmetic on inactive member of a union UB?
Let's consider this example code:
struct sso
{
union {
struct {
char* ptr;
char size_r[8];
} large_str;
char short_str[16];
};
const char* ...
6
votes
5
answers
2k
views
Is apparent NULL pointer dereference in C actually pointer arithmetic?
I've got this piece of code. It appears to dereference a null pointer here, but then bitwise-ANDs the result with unsigned int. I really don't understand the whole part. What is it intended to do? Is ...
1
vote
7
answers
4k
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Byte precision pointer arithmetic in C when sizeof(char) != 1
How can one portably perform pointer arithmetic with single byte precision?
Keep in mind that:
char is not 1 byte on all platforms
sizeof(void) == 1 is only available as an extension in GCC
While ...
32
votes
1
answer
2k
views
Set shared_ptr with new_pointer that is old_pointer + offset
Here is a smart pointer: std::shared_ptr<char> p(new char[size]) which represents array filled with raw binary file content. After (and only after) the whole array is copied from file to RAM, I ...
13
votes
3
answers
2k
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Calculate array length via pointer arithmetic
I was wondering how *(&array + 1) actually works. I saw this as an easy way to calculate the array length and want to understand it properly before using it. I'm not very experienced with pointer ...
12
votes
1
answer
9k
views
C - how to convert a pointer in an array to an index?
In the many search functions of C (bsearch comes to mind) if a result is found, a pointer to the spot in the array is returned. How can I convert this pointer to the index in the array that was ...
11
votes
5
answers
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views
Why does i[arr] work as well as arr[i] in C with larger data types?
It's fairly common knowledge that if you access an element of an array as arr[i] in C that you can also access the element as i[arr], because these just boil down to *(arr + i) and addition is ...
6
votes
2
answers
1k
views
Why subtract null pointer in offsetof()?
Linux's stddef.h defines offsetof() as:
#define offsetof(TYPE, MEMBER) ((size_t) &((TYPE *)0)->MEMBER)
whereas the Wikipedia article on offsetof() (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Offsetof) ...
5
votes
2
answers
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Increment operator on pointer of array errors?
I'm trying something very simple, well supposed to be simple but it somehow is messing with me...
I am trying to understand the effect of ++ on arrays when treated as pointers and pointers when ...
3
votes
4
answers
399
views
How exactly pointer subtraction works in case of integer array?
#include<stdio.h>
int main()
{
int arr[] = {10, 20, 30, 40, 50, 60};
int *ptr1 = arr;
int *ptr2 = arr + 5;
printf("Number of elements between two pointer are: %d.",
...
2
votes
3
answers
224
views
Pointer arithmetic getting wrong output [duplicate]
In the following program, Here ptr Has been declared as a pointer to an integer pointer and assigned the base address of the array p[], which has been declared as an array of integer pointer. Suppose ...
1
vote
3
answers
8k
views
Why does incrementing a void pointer by 1 moves one byte ahead but it's 4 bytes for an integer pointer,8 for double? [duplicate]
In the following program,if I add 1 to a void pointer, it moves one byte ahead.But,quite as expected, it moves 4 and 8 bytes respectively for int and double pointers.Why does the void pointer move by ...
28
votes
3
answers
3k
views
Can you compare nullptr to other pointers for order? Is it always smaller?
This question is based on code that I found that monitors possible memory leaks, so it contains some code that you probably don't want to see in regular programs like ordering pointers.
However, I saw ...
20
votes
6
answers
2k
views
Is taking the address of a local variable a constant expression in C++11?
The following C++11 program:
int x = 42;
void f()
{
int y = 43;
static_assert(&x < &y, "foo");
}
int main()
{
f();
}
Doesn't compile with gcc 4.7 as it ...
14
votes
2
answers
936
views
C weird array syntax in multi-dimensional arrays
I've known that this is true:
x[4] == 4[x]
What is the equivalent for multi-dimensional arrays? Is the following true?
x[4][3] == 3[x[4]] == 3[4[x]]
12
votes
2
answers
911
views
Pointer to one before first element of array
It is said in C that when pointers refer to the same array or one element past the end of that array the arithmetics and comparisons are well defined. Then what about one before the first element of ...
12
votes
3
answers
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views
When is pointer subtraction undefined in C?
char *buf = malloc(bufsize)
char *ptr = buf;
…
while(condition) {
ptrdiff_t offset = ptr - buf; // <========== THIS LINE
// offset will never be negative because we only ever *increase* ...
10
votes
9
answers
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views
What are convincing examples where pointer arithmetic is preferable to array subscripting?
I'm preparing some slides for an introductory C class, and I'm trying to present good examples (and motivation) for using pointer arithmetic over array subscripting.
A lot of the examples I see in ...
10
votes
6
answers
17k
views
Difference between two pointer variables [duplicate]
i have asked this question in a written test.
while running the below code on my lapi, i am getting 10 as output
#include<stdio.h>
int main()
{
int *i, *j;/* two pointer variable*/
i = (...
8
votes
2
answers
2k
views
Can std::uintptr_t be used to avoid undefined behavior of out-of-bounds pointer arithmetic?
Now we know that doing out-of-bounds-pointer-arithmetic has undefined behavior as described in this SO question.
My question is: can we workaround such restriction by casting to std::uintptr_t for ...
7
votes
1
answer
2k
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Subtracting registers with an LEA instruction?
Does the LEA instruction support negative displacement?
mov rax, 1
lea rsi, [rsp - rax]
When I use the above code in my asm file I got the error:
$ nasm -f macho64 test.asm
$ error: invalid effective ...
7
votes
4
answers
36k
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Using void pointer to an array
I was just trying to use a void pointer to an integer array ,I tried to see if i can print the array back by casting it back into int. But it is giving me some random value. Can you tell me where i am ...
7
votes
2
answers
490
views
How does a hardware trap in a three-past-the-end pointer happen even if the pointer is never dereferenced?
In his November 1, 2005 C++ column, Herb Sutter writes ...
int A[17];
int* endA = A + 17;
for( int* ptr = A; ptr < endA; ptr += 5 )
{
// ...
}
[O]n some CPU architectures, including
current ...
6
votes
1
answer
219
views
Is one-past-end pointer OK for non-array object types?
Is this valid C++?
int main()
{
int i = 0;
int* pi = &i;
++pi;
}
I know that one-past-end pointers are allowed for array types, but I'm not sure in this case. Does that code ...
6
votes
5
answers
28k
views
Iterating 2D array with pointer expressions in C
I'm practicing pointers and want to substitute pointer operations in place of the arrays to traverse through the elements of the array. I have read numerous articles and cannot grasp this concept. Can ...