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Indirection and Address-of Operators

 

The latest version of this topic can be found at Indirection and Address-of Operators.

The indirection operator (*) accesses a value indirectly, through a pointer. The operand must be a pointer value. The result of the operation is the value addressed by the operand; that is, the value at the address to which its operand points. The type of the result is the type that the operand addresses.

If the operand points to a function, the result is a function designator. If it points to a storage location, the result is an l-value designating the storage location.

If the pointer value is invalid, the result is undefined. The following list includes some of the most common conditions that invalidate a pointer value.

  • The pointer is a null pointer.

  • The pointer specifies the address of a local item that is not visible at the time of the reference.

  • The pointer specifies an address that is inappropriately aligned for the type of the object pointed to.

  • The pointer specifies an address not used by the executing program.

The address-of operator (&) gives the address of its operand. The operand of the address-of operator can be either a function designator or an l-value that designates an object that is not a bit field and is not declared with the register storage-class specifier.

The result of the address operation is a pointer to the operand. The type addressed by the pointer is the type of the operand.

The address-of operator can only be applied to variables with fundamental, structure, or union types that are declared at the file-scope level, or to subscripted array references. In these expressions, a constant expression that does not include the address-of operator can be added to or subtracted from the address expression.

Examples

The following examples use these declarations:

int *pa, x;  
int a[20];  
double d;  

This statement uses the address-of operator:

pa = &a[5];  

The address-of operator (&) takes the address of the sixth element of the array a. The result is stored in the pointer variable pa.

x = *pa;  

The indirection operator (*) is used in this example to access the int value at the address stored in pa. The value is assigned to the integer variable x.

if( x == *&x )  
    printf( "True\n" );  

This example prints the word True, demonstrating that the result of applying the indirection operator to the address of x is the same as x.

int roundup( void );     /* Function declaration */  
  
int  *proundup  = roundup;  
int  *pround  = &roundup;  

Once the function roundup is declared, two pointers to roundup are declared and initialized. The first pointer, proundup, is initialized using only the name of the function, while the second, pround, uses the address-of operator in the initialization. The initializations are equivalent.

See Also

Indirection Operator: *
Address-of Operator: &