In a book called Programming Windows, in one of the examples, we have this line:
ReadFile (hFile, buffer, MAXREAD, &i, NULL) ;
i
here was previously declared as int
, but the 4th argument of ReadFile
is LPDWORD
, which is a typedef for DWORD*
, and DWORD
is a typedef for unsigned long
. It's effectively type punning. On most systems unsigned long
and int
are the same size, but I think accessing a variable as if it were some other type is Undefined Behavior. Is this fine? Is this fine only if the sizes are the same? Is this UB? I checked a couple of errata websites and they don't seem to list this. Am I missing something?
unsigned long
andint
are the same size No, they're not. Windows is the outlier here. On just about every other 64-bit architecture, anint
is 32 bits while an[unsigned] long
is 64 bites.i
should be declared as aDWORD
.