Possible Duplicate:
Why do these two pointer subtractions give different results?
char arr[] = "stackoverflow";
char *p1 = arr;
char *p2 = arr + 3;
printf("%d", (int*)p2 - (int*)p1);
it's answer is 0..Can you explain why is it so ?
Possible Duplicate:
Why do these two pointer subtractions give different results?
char arr[] = "stackoverflow";
char *p1 = arr;
char *p2 = arr + 3;
printf("%d", (int*)p2 - (int*)p1);
it's answer is 0..Can you explain why is it so ?
Because p2 - p1
is < sizeof (int)
. So (int *) p2 - (int *) p1 == 0
, the number of int
elements between the two pointers.
Because you're invoking implementation-defined/undefined behaviour. An int
is probably of size 4 on your platform, so at least one of those pointers is not correctly aligned.
In practice, it's probably because the compiler is doing something like (p2 / 4) - (p1 / 4)
under the hood.
I think what you probably meant to do is:
printf("%d", (int)(p2 - p1));
But this does not even require a conversion because the difference between two pointers returns a signed integral type (ptrdiff_t
) so you can leave out the typecast and change "%d"
to "%td"
.
t
length modifier: printf("%td", p2 - p1);
The %d
is for an int
argument.