If I remember correctly most C compilers define NULL like this:

    #define NULL ((void*)0)

This is to ensure that NULL is interpreted as being a pointer type (in C).  However this can cause issues in the much more type strict world of C++.  Eg:

    // Example taken from wikibooks.org
    std::string * str = NULL; // Can't automatically cast void * to std::string *
    void (C::*pmf) () = &C::func;
    if (pmf == NULL) {} // Can't automatically cast from void * to pointer to member function.

Therefore in the current C++ standard null pointers should be initialized with the literal 0.  Obviously because people are so used to using the NULL define I think a lot of C++ compilers either silently ignore the issue or redefine NULL to be 0 in C++ code.  Eg:

    #ifdef __cplusplus
    #define NULL (0)
    #else
    #define NULL ((void*)0)
    #endif

The C++x0 standard now defines a `nullptr` keyword to represent null pointers.  Visual C++ 2005's CLI/C++ compiler also uses this keyword when setting managed pointers to null.  In current compilers you can create a template to emulate this new keyword.

There is a much more detailed article on [wikibooks.org][1] discussing this issue.

  [1]: http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/More_C%2B%2B_Idioms/nullptr