Question: Are the following two statements identical?
Answer: No! Arrays are not pointers. An array is a single, pre-allocated chunk of contiguous elements (all of the same type), fixed in size and location. A pointer on the other hand, is a reference to any data element (of a particular type) located anywhere. A pointer must be assigned to point to space allocated elsewhere, but it can be reassigned any time. The array declaration char str[6] ; requests that space for 6 characters be set aside, to be knownby name str. In other words there is a location named str at which six characters are stored. The pointer declaration char *str ; on the other hand, requests a place that holds a pointer, to be known by the name str. This pointer can point almost anywhere to any char, to any contiguous array of chars, or nowhere. |
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الاكثر فائدة حسب تقييم المستخدمين:
- What will be the output of the following code?
void main ()
{ int i = 0 , a[3] ;
a[i] = i++;
printf ("%d",a[i]) ;
} - Why doesn't the following code give the desired result?
int x = 3000, y = 2000 ;
long int z = x * y ; - Why doesn't the following statement work?
char str[ ] = "Hello" ;
strcat ( str, '!' ) ; - How do I know how many elements an array can hold?
- How do I compare character data stored at two different memory locations?