4

I am studying pointers for c and this placement of * really really confuses me.

I understand what int *a is..

But what is

a = malloc(n * sizeof(int) ) 

I understand what above is doing but why is * in the middle of by itself?? This part really confuse me so please someone can explain to me?

3
  • * multiplies n with sizeof(int). It is the multiplication operator.
    – Spikatrix
    Mar 5, 2015 at 15:03
  • If more confusing would be the even better approach doing this: int * a = malloc(n * sizeof * a) ; ;-)
    – alk
    Mar 5, 2015 at 16:09
  • I thank you everyone. I realize how silly this question is. Mar 5, 2015 at 16:52

6 Answers 6

5

unary * means dereferencing and binary * means multiplication.

4

The * in the middle is a multiplicative operator. The result of the binary * operator is the product of the operands.
Do not confuse it with unary dereference operator which applies only on pointer objects.

3

The * here is very simple, and ironically, you'd have no problem figuring it out before you learned about pointers. Now, C's notoriously confusing syntax simply mislead you.

The * here is just multiplication. It's n times the size of int, which corresponds to an allocation of a block of memory capable of storing n ints

A simple way of telling the multiplication operator form the dereference operator is that multiplication should have two operands so a = b * c is clearly multiplication. While the dereference operator has a single operand like so: a=*b (* here works only on b).

1

* operator is used both for multiplication and dereferencing the pointer

int b=10;
int *a = &b;

*a is dereferencing the pointer, where * is a unary operator

int c = b * 10;

Here * does multiplication where * is a binary operator

0

That's used to multiply values. 5*5 will produce 25. int *a; is a pointer to a while a*a is multiply a by a.

0

Just to simplify. * when used before a variable (or etc) without any other variable (or etc) right before it, it's a unary operator, it just "affects" one single variable (or etc). see the examples below:

int *a = 1  

Another one:

a = b + *c

Notice that in the last example we have a variable before the * but not right before it, there's a plus sign(+) in the middle of them.

But if you have a variable (or etc) right before *, it's a binary operator, it "affects" two variables (or etc).

a = b * *c

See, here I'm using the two of them. I'm assigning the value of b times what c points to, to a.

Hope it helps you undestand it better.

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