C - pointer behavior with pre and post increment - c

In am doing some experiment in C pointers and trying to understand its behaviour. The following are my assumptions for the below codes. Correct me if I am wrong.
I have the following codes:
int n[5] = {3,6,9,12,15};
int *ptr = n;
ptr++;
printf("%d", *ptr); //Needless to say, the output will be 6
My assumption: The output above is 6 because ptr++ means ptr = ptr + 1 I am changing the value of ptr which is the address of n[0].
Now we take a look at the following scenario:
int n[5] = {3,6,9,12,15};
int *ptr = n;
*ptr++;
printf("%d", *ptr); //Why is the output still 6?
My question is: How do we interpret *ptr++? Does it means:
*ptr = *ptr + 1 or
*ptr = ptr + 1 or
ptr = ptr + 1 or what?
By the way, when I print out values of n, it is still 3,6,9,12,15.
Sorry for 2nd question:
How shall we interpret *++ptr and ++*ptr then?

Expression
*ptr++;
have value
*ptr
before incrementing ptr and then ptr is increment itself. There is no sense to write
*ptr++;
because the value of expression that is *ptr before incrementing of ptr is not used. So in fact the result of these expressions (expression-statements)
ptr++;
and
*ptr++;
is the same.
As for expressions *++ptr and ++*ptr then in this expression *++ptr at first ptr is incremented ( that is it will point to the second element of the array) and then dereferenced and its value is the value of the second element.
In this expression ++*ptr at first the value of the first element of the array is returned (that is 3) and then this value is incremented and you will get 4.

Please check the link below:
Difference between ++*argv, *argv++, *(argv++) and *(++argv)
You need to know about operator precedence in-order to understand what is going on here.
++ operator has higher precedence over *

Both ptr++ and *ptr++ increment the pointer after they have returned, in the first case, the previous address to which ptr was pointing, and in the second case, the value from this address. You do not do anything with the results, so you do not see the difference.
*++ptr will first increment ptr, then returns the value to which it now points.
++*ptr will get the value to which ptr points, increment it, and then return.

The order of precedence is also compiler dependent. It may change depending upon compilers. Better use a parenthesis to be sure of output

It is due to operator precedence in C. The below link may help you
Increment or decrement operator has higher precedence that dereference operator.So your
*ptr++; is similar to *(ptr++)
http://www.difranco.net/compsci/C_Operator_Precedence_Table.htm

Because of the operator precedence *pt++; is the same as *(ptr++); so it increments the pointer, then dereference the pointer and does nothing.

Related

Is there a difference between Incrementing an array element and incrementing an array index in C? [duplicate]

Recently I have come across this problem which I am unable to understand by myself.
What do these three Expressions REALLY mean?
*ptr++
*++ptr
++*ptr
I have tried Ritchie. But unfortunately was unable to follow what he told about these 3 operations.
I know they are all performed to increment the pointer/the value pointed to. I can also guess there may be a lot of things about precedence and order of evaluation. Like one increments the pointer first then fetches the content of that pointer, one simply fetches the content and then increments the pointer etc etc. As you can see, I don't have a clear understanding about their actual operations, which i would like to clear as soon as possible. But I am truly lost when I get a chance to apply them in programs. For example:
int main()
{
char *p = "Hello";
while(*p++)
printf("%c",*p);
return 0;
}
gives me this output:
ello
But my expectation was that it would print Hello .
One final request -- Please give me examples for how each expression works in a given code snippet. As most of the time only a mere paragraph of theory gets flown over my head.
Here's a detailed explanation which I hope will be helpful. Let's begin with your program, as it's the simplest to explain.
int main()
{
char *p = "Hello";
while(*p++)
printf("%c",*p);
return 0;
}
The first statement:
char* p = "Hello";
declares p as a pointer to char. When we say "pointer to a char", what does that mean? It means that the value of p is the address of a char; p tells us where in memory there is some space set aside to hold a char.
The statement also initializes p to point to the first character in the string literal "Hello". For the sake of this exercise, it's important to understand p as pointing not to the entire string, but only to the first character, 'H'. After all, p is a pointer to one char, not to the entire string. The value of p is the address of the 'H' in "Hello".
Then you set up a loop:
while (*p++)
What does the loop condition *p++ mean? Three things are at work here that make this puzzling (at least until familiarity sets in):
The precedence of the two operators, postfix ++ and indirection *
The value of a postfix increment expression
The side effect of a postfix increment expression
1. Precedence. A quick glance at the precedence table for operators will tell you that postfix increment has a higher precedence (16) than dereference / indirection (15). This means that the complex expression *p++ is going to be grouped as: *(p++). That is to say, the * part will be applied to the value of the p++ part. So let's take the p++ part first.
2. Postfix expression value. The value of p++ is the value of p before the increment. If you have:
int i = 7;
printf ("%d\n", i++);
printf ("%d\n", i);
the output will be:
7
8
because i++ evaluates to i before the increment. Similarly p++ is going to evaluate to the current value of p. As we know, the current value of p is the address of 'H'.
So now the p++ part of *p++ has been evaluated; it's the current value of p. Then the * part happens. *(current value of p) means: access the value at the address held by p. We know that the value at that address is 'H'. So the expression *p++ evaluates to 'H'.
Now hold on a minute, you're saying. If *p++ evaluates to 'H', why doesn't that 'H' print in the above code? That's where side effects come in.
3. Postfix expression side effects. The postfix ++ has the value of the current operand, but it has the side effect of incrementing that operand. Huh? Take a look at that int code again:
int i = 7;
printf ("%d\n", i++);
printf ("%d\n", i);
As noted earlier, the output will be:
7
8
When i++ is evaluated in the first printf(), it evaluates to 7. But the C standard guarantees that at some point before the second printf() begins executing, the side effect of the ++ operator will have taken place. That is to say, before the second printf() happens, i will have been incremented as a result of the ++ operator in the first printf(). This, by the way, is one of the few guarantees the standard gives about the timing of side effects.
In your code, then, when the expression *p++is evaluated, it evaluates to 'H'. But by the time you get to this:
printf ("%c", *p)
that pesky side-effect has occurred. p has been incremented. Whoa! It no longer points to 'H', but to one character past 'H': to the 'e', in other words. That explains your cockneyfied output:
ello
Hence the chorus of helpful (and accurate) suggestions in the other answers: to print the Received Pronunciation "Hello" and not its cockney counterpart, you need something like
while (*p)
printf ("%c", *p++);
So much for that. What about the rest? You ask about the meanings of these:
*ptr++
*++ptr
++*ptr
We just talked about the first, so let's look at the second: *++ptr.
We saw in our earlier explanation that postfix increment p++ has a certain precedence, a value, and a side effect. The prefix increment ++p has the same side effect as its postfix counterpart: it increments its operand by 1. However, it has a different precedence and a different value.
The prefix increment has lower precedence than the postfix; it has precedence 15. In other words, it has the same precedence as the dereference / indirection operator *. In an expression like
*++ptr
what matters is not precedence: the two operators are identical in precedence. So associativity kicks in. The prefix increment and the indirection operator have right-left associativity. Because of that associativity, the operand ptr is going to be grouped with the rightmost operator ++ before the operator more to the left, *. In other words, the expression is going to be grouped *(++ptr). So, as with *ptr++ but for a different reason, here too the * part is going to be applied to the value of the ++ptr part.
So what is that value? The value of the prefix increment expression is the value of the operand after the increment. This makes it a very different beast from the postfix increment operator. Let's say you have:
int i = 7;
printf ("%d\n", ++i);
printf ("%d\n", i);
The output will be:
8
8
... different from what we saw with the postfix operator. Similarly, if you have:
char* p = "Hello";
printf ("%c ", *p); // note space in format string
printf ("%c ", *++p); // value of ++p is p after the increment
printf ("%c ", *p++); // value of p++ is p before the increment
printf ("%c ", *p); // value of p has been incremented as a side effect of p++
the output will be:
H e e l // good dog
Do you see why?
Now we get to the third expression you asked about, ++*ptr. That's the trickiest of the lot, actually. Both operators have the same precedence, and right-left associativity. This means the expression will be grouped ++(*ptr). The ++ part will be applied to the value of the *ptr part.
So if we have:
char q[] = "Hello";
char* p = q;
printf ("%c", ++*p);
the surprisingly egotistical output is going to be:
I
What?! Okay, so the *p part is going to evaluate to 'H'. Then the ++ comes into play, at which point, it's going to be applied to the 'H', not to the pointer at all! What happens when you add 1 to 'H'? You get 1 plus the ASCII value of 'H', 72; you get 73. Represent that as a char, and you get the char with the ASCII value of 73: 'I'.
That takes care of the three expressions you asked about in your question. Here is another, mentioned in the first comment to your question:
(*ptr)++
That one is interesting too. If you have:
char q[] = "Hello";
char* p = q;
printf ("%c", (*p)++);
printf ("%c\n", *p);
it will give you this enthusiastic output:
HI
What's going on? Again, it's a matter of precedence, expression value, and side effects. Because of the parentheses, the *p part is treated as a primary expression. Primary expressions trump everything else; they get evaluated first. And *p, as you know, evaluates to 'H'. The rest of the expression, the ++ part, is applied to that value. So, in this case, (*p)++ becomes 'H'++.
What is the value of 'H'++? If you said 'I', you've forgotten (already!) our discussion of value vs. side effect with postfix increment. Remember, 'H'++ evaluates to the current value of 'H'. So that first printf() is going to print 'H'. Then, as a side effect, that 'H' is going to be incremented to 'I'. The second printf() prints that 'I'. And you have your cheery greeting.
All right, but in those last two cases, why do I need
char q[] = "Hello";
char* p = q;
Why can't I just have something like
char* p = "Hello";
printf ("%c", ++*p); // attempting to change string literal!
Because "Hello" is a string literal. If you try ++*p, you're trying to change the 'H' in the string to 'I', making the whole string "Iello". In C, string literals are read-only; attempting to modify them invokes undefined behavior. "Iello" is undefined in English as well, but that's just coincidence.
Conversely, you can't have
char p[] = "Hello";
printf ("%c", *++p); // attempting to modify value of array identifier!
Why not? Because in this instance, p is an array. An array is not a modifiable l-value; you can't change where p points by pre- or post- increment or decrement, because the name of the array works as though it's a constant pointer. (That's not what it actually is; that's just a convenient way to look at it.)
To sum up, here are the three things you asked about:
*ptr++ // effectively dereferences the pointer, then increments the pointer
*++ptr // effectively increments the pointer, then dereferences the pointer
++*ptr // effectively dereferences the pointer, then increments dereferenced value
And here's a fourth, every bit as much fun as the other three:
(*ptr)++ // effectively forces a dereference, then increments dereferenced value
The first and second will crash if ptr is actually an array identifier. The third and fourth will crash if ptr points to a string literal.
There you have it. I hope it's all crystal now. You've been a great audience, and I'll be here all week.
Suppose ptr points to the i-th element of array arr.
*ptr++ evaluates to arr[i] and sets ptr to point to the (i+1)-th element of arr. It is equivalent to *(ptr++).
*++ptr sets ptr to point to the (i+1)-th element of arr and evaluates to arr[i+1]. It is equivalent to *(++ptr).
++*ptr increases arr[i] by one and evaluates to its increased value; the pointer ptr is left untouched. It is equivalent to ++(*ptr).
There's also one more, but you'd need parentheses to write it:
(*ptr)++ increases arr[i] by one and evaluates to its value before being increased; the pointer ptr is again left untouched.
The rest you can figure out yourself; it was also answered by #Jaguar.
*ptr++ : post increment a pointer ptr
*++ptr : Pre Increment a pointer ptr
++*ptr : preincrement the value at ptr location
Read here about pre increment and post increment operators
This will give Hello as output
int main()
{
const char *p = "Hello";
while(*p)
printf("%c",*p++);//Increment the pointer here
return 0;
}
The condition in your loop is bad:
while(*p++)
printf("%c",*p);
Is the same as
while(*p)
{
++p;
printf("%c",*p);
}
And that's wrong, this should be:
while(*p)
{
printf("%c",*p);
++p;
}
*ptr++ is the same as *(ptr++), which is:
const char *ptr = "example";
char value;
value = *ptr;
++p;
printf("%c", value); // will print 'e'
*++ptr is the same as *(++ptr), which is:
const char *ptr = "example";
char value;
++p;
value = *ptr;
printf("%c", value); // will print 'x'
++*ptr is the same as ++(*ptr), which is:
const char *ptr = "example";
char value;
value = *ptr;
++value;
printf("%c", value); // will print 'f' ('e' + 1)
You right about precedence, note that the * has precedence over prefix increment, but not over postfix increment. Here's how these breakdown:
*ptr++ - going from left-to-right, dereference the pointer, and then increment the pointer value (not what it points to, due to the precedence of postfix over dereference)
*++ptr - increment the pointer and then dereference it, this is because prefix and dereference have the same precedence and so they are evaluated in order right-to-left
++*ptr - similar to the above in terms of precedence, again going from right-to-left in order dereference the pointer and then increment what the pointer points to. Please note that in your case this one will lead to undefined behaviour because you're trying to modify a read-only variable (char* p = "Hello";).
I'm going to add my take because while the other answers are correct I think they're missing something.
v = *ptr++
means
temp = ptr;
ptr = ptr + 1
v = *temp;
Where as
v = *++ptr
means
ptr = ptr + 1
v = *ptr
It's important to understand that post increment (and post decrement) mean
temp = ptr // Temp created here!!!
ptr = ptr + 1 // or - 1 if decrement)
v = *temp // Temp destroyed here!!!
Why does it matter? Well in C that's not so important. In C++ though ptr might be a complex type like an iterator. For example
for (std::set<int>::iterator it = someSet.begin(); it != someSet.end(); it++)
In this case, because it is a complex type it++ maybe have side effects because of the temp creation. Of course if you're lucky the compiler will try to throw away code that's not needed but if iterator's constructor or destructor do anything then it++ is going to show those effects when it creates temp.
The short of what I'm trying to say is Write What You Mean. If you mean increment ptr then write ++ptr not ptr++. If you mean temp = ptr, ptr += 1, temp then write ptr++
*ptr++ // 1
This is the same as:
tmp = *ptr;
ptr++;
So the value of the object pointed to by ptr is retrieved, then ptr is incremented.
*++ptr // 2
This is the same as:
++ptr;
tmp = *ptr;
So the pointer ptr is incremented, then the object pointed to by ptr is read.
++*ptr // 3
This is the same as:
++(*ptr);
So the object pointed to by ptr is incremented; ptr itself is unchanged.
Pointer Expressions : *ptr++, *++ptr and ++*ptr :
Note : pointers must initialized and must have valid address. Because in RAM apart from our program(a.out) there are lot more program running simultaneously i.e if you are try to access some memory which was not reserved for you OS will through Segmentation fault.
Before explaining this lets consider simple example ?
#include<stdio.h>
int main()
{
int num = 300;
int *ptr;//uninitialized pointer.. must be initialized
ptr = &num;
printf(" num = %d ptr = %p and data on ptr : %d \n",num,ptr,*ptr);
*ptr = *ptr + 1;//*ptr means value/data on the address.. so here value gets incremented
printf(" num = %d ptr = %p and data on ptr : %d \n",num,ptr,*ptr);
/** observe here that "num" got changed but manually we didn't change, it got modified by pointer **/
ptr = ptr + 1;//ptr means address.. so here address got incremented
/** char pointer gets incremented by 1 bytes
Integer pointer gets incremented by 4 bytes
**/
printf(" num = %d ptr = %p and data on ptr : %d \n",num,ptr,*ptr);
}
analyze the output of above code, I hope you got the output of above code. One thing is clear from above code is that pointer name (ptr) means we are talking about address and *ptr means we are talking abbout value/data.
CASE 1 : *ptr++ , *++ptr, *(ptr++) and *(++ptr) :
above mentioned all 4 syntax are similar, in all address gets incremented but how address gets incremented that's different.
Note : for solving any expression find out how many operators are there in expression, then find out priorities of operator. I multiple operators having same priority then check order of evolution or associativity that may right(R) to left(L) ot left to right.
*ptr++ : Here 2 operators are there namely de-reference( *) and ++(increment). Both are having same priority then check the associativity which is R to L. So starts solving from Right to Left, whatever operators is coming first.
*ptr++ : first ++ came while solving from R to L, so address gets incremented but its post increment.
*++ptr : Same as first one here also address gets incremented but its pre increment.
*(ptr++) : Here there are 3 operators, among them grouping () having highest priority, So first ptr++ solved i.e address gets incremented but post.
*(++ptr) : Same as above case here also address gets incremented but pre increment.
CASE 2 : ++*ptr, ++(*ptr), (*ptr)++ :
above mentioned all 4 syntax are similar, in all value/data gets incremented but how value gets changed that's different.
++*ptr : first * came while solving from R to L, so value gets changed but its pre increment.
++(*ptr) : Same as above case, value gets modified.
(*ptr)++ : Here there are 3 operators, among them grouping () having highest priority, Inside () *ptr is there , So first *ptr is solved i.e value gets incremented but post.
Note : ++*ptr and *ptr = *ptr + 1 both are same, in both case value gets changed.
++*ptr : only 1 instruction (INC) is used, directly value gets changed in single shot.
*ptr = *ptr + 1 : here first value gets incremented(INC) and then assigned(MOV).
To understand all above different syntax of increment on pointer lets consider simple code :
#include<stdio.h>
int main()
{
int num = 300;
int *ptr;
ptr = &num;
printf(" num = %d ptr = %p and data on ptr : %d \n",num,ptr,*ptr);
*ptr++;//address changed(post increment), value remains un-changed
// *++ptr;//address changed(post increment), value remains un-changed
// *(ptr)++;//address changed(post increment), value remains un-changed
// *(++ptr);//address changed(post increment), value remains un-changed
// ++*ptr;//value changed(pre increment), address remains un-changed
// (*ptr)++;//value changed(pre increment), address remains un-changed
// ++(*ptr);//value changed(post increment), address remains un-changed
printf(" num = %d ptr = %p and data on ptr : %d \n",num,ptr,*ptr);
}
In above code, try to comment/un-comment comments and analyze outputs.
Pointers as Constant : there are no of ways by which you can make pointers as constant, few I am mentioning here.
1)const int *p OR int const *p : Here value is constant, address is not constant i.e where p is pointing ? Some address ? On that address what is the value ? Some value right ? That value is constant, you can't modify that value but where pointer is pointing ? Some address right ? It can point to other address also.
To understand this lets consider below code :
#include<stdio.h>
int main()
{
int num = 300;
const int *ptr;//constant value, address is modifible
ptr = &num;
printf(" num = %d ptr = %p and data on ptr : %d \n",num,ptr,*ptr);
*ptr++;//
// *++ptr;//possible bcz you are trying to change address which is possible
// *(ptr)++;//possible
// *(++ptr);//possible
// ++*ptr;//not possible bcz you trying to change value which is not allowed
// (*ptr)++;//not possible
// ++(*ptr);//not possible
printf(" num = %d ptr = %p and data on ptr : %d \n",num,ptr,*ptr);
}
Try to analyze the output of above code
2)int const *p : it's called '**constant pointe**r' i.e address is constant but value is not constant. Here you are not allowed to change the address but you can modify the value.
Note : constant pointer(above case) must initialize while declariung itself.
To understand this lets check simple code.
#include<stdio.h>
int main()
{
int x = 300;
int* const p;
p = &x;
printf("x = %d p =%p and *p = %d\n",num,p,*p);
}
In above code, if you observe that there is no ++*p or *p++ So you may thought this is simple case because we are not changing address or value but it will produce error. Why ? Reason I mention in comments.
#include<stdio.h>
int main()
{
int x = 300;
/** constant pointer must initialize while decaring itself **/
int* const p;//constant pointer i.e its pointing to some address(here its pointing to garbage), it should point to same address(i.e garbage ad
dress only
p = &x;// but here what we are doing ? we are changing address. we are making p to point to address of x instead of garbage address.
printf("x = %d p =%p and *p = %d\n",num,p,*p);
}
So whats the Solution of this problem ?
int* const p = &x;
for more about this case lets consider below example.
#include<stdio.h>
int main()
{
int num = 300;
int *const ptr = &num;//constant value, address is modifible
printf(" num = %d ptr = %p and data on ptr : %d \n",num,ptr,*ptr);
*ptr++;//not possible
// *++ptr;//not possible bcz you are trying to change address which is not possible
// *(ptr)++;//not possible
// *(++ptr);//not possible
// ++*ptr;// possible bcz you trying to change value which is allowed
// (*ptr)++;// possible
// ++(*ptr);// possible
printf(" num = %d ptr = %p and data on ptr : %d \n",num,ptr,*ptr);
}
3)const int* const p : Here both address and value are constant.
To understand this lets check below code
#include<stdio.h>
int main()
{
int num = 300;
const int* const ptr = &num;//constant value,constant address
printf(" num = %d ptr = %p and data on ptr : %d \n",num,ptr,*ptr);
*ptr++;//not possible
++*ptr;//not possible
printf(" num = %d ptr = %p and data on ptr : %d \n",num,ptr,*ptr);
}
Postfix ++ has higher precedence than unary *.
Prefix ++ and unary * have the same precedence, expressions with both have right-to-left operator associativity, meaning the right one(s) binds to the operand before the left one(s).
Therefore:
*ptr++ Increment the pointer by 1 item then de-reference the memory location it had before incrementing.
*++ptr Increment the pointer by 1 item then de-reference the memory location where it now points.
++*ptr De-reference the memory location then increment the contents (value) there by 1.
postfix and prefix has higher precedence than dereference so
*ptr++ here post increment ptr and then pointing to new value of ptr
*++ptr here Pre Increment fist then pointing to new value of ptr
++*ptr here first get the value of ptr pointing to and increment that vlaue
const char *p = "Hello";
*p means "Hello"
^
|
p
*p++ means "Hello"
^
|
p
*++p means "Hello"
^
| (WHILE THE STATEMENT IS EXECUTED)
p
*++p means "Hello"
^
| (AFTER THE STATEMENT IS EXECUTED)
p
++*p means that you are trying to increment the ASCII value of *p which
is "Hello"
^
|
p
you cannot increment the value 'cause it's a constant so you would get an error
as for your while loop the loop runs until *p++ reaches the end of the string where there is a '\0'(NULL) character.
Now since *p++ skips the first character you would only get your output starting from the second character.
The following code will not output anything because while loop has '\0'
const char *p = "Hello";
while('\0')
printf("%c",*p);
The following code will give you the same output as the next code i.e ello .
const char *p = "Hello";
while(*++p)
printf("%c",*p);
...................................
const char *p = "Hello";
while(*p++)
printf("%c",*p);

Need clarification on pointer incrementation

Please help me understand the reason the following code works the way it does:
#include <stdio.h>
int main(){
int a = 10;
void *b = &a;
int *p = b;
printf("%u",*p++);
return 0;
}
I know the output of printf will be 10, but I'm not quite following why *p++ is 10
Here are my steps:
1) void *b = &a; stores the address of a in pointer b
2) int *p = b; pointer p now points to the same data item as pointer b
3) printf("%u",*p++); is where I get confused... the dereference of pointer p is a, which is 10... isn't *p++ basically the same as 10+1 which will be 11?
*p++ is essentially *(p++). It evaluates to the value of p before it is incremented which is the address to a. Then you dereference it which evaluates to the value 10.
The post-increment operator in the expression *p++ applies to the pointer, not the value stored at that location, so the result is never 11, before or after it is evaluated. The expression *p++ means: dereference p (get it's value) then increment p one location. Since p points to an int, incrementing it will move it forward sizeof(int) bytes . The addition does not ever apply to the value that p points to, which is 10.
However, the expression (*p)++ is different. It dereferences p (gets its value) and then increments the value in that memory location. The expression evaluates to the original value. So after executing the statement
int c = (*p)++;
the variable c would equal 10, while a would equal 11.
*p++ is parsed as *(p++). p++ evaluates to p, and then increments p, so the change won't be seen until the next reference to p. So *p is 10, *p++ is 10 (but p now points to &a+1), *++p is undefined behavior (because *(&a+1) is not a valid value), (*p)++ is 10 but changes a to 11, and ++*p (or ++(*p)) is 11 (as is a).
Variable p is a pointer to an int (pointing to a)
The expression *p dereferences the pointer, hence it's like accessing the int a directly.
Operator postfix ++ on pointer p takes precedence over the dereferencing. Therefore *p++ increments the pointer p (to whatever junk is in memory after int a) AFTER the expression is evaluated, so the dereferencing still resolves to a and that's why 10 is printed. But after the statement is run the value of p is changed. So, likely after that statement if you do printf("%u ",*p) you will get an awkward value.
If you do ++*p however, the expression is evaluated as ++ operation on the dereferenced int variable pointed by p. If you want to avoid trouble like this, when not sure, use parenthesis:
(*p)++
++(*p)
And you're making sure you are dereferencing the value and acting on it. Incrementing a pointer value is a very dangerous operation allowed by languages like C and C++, so avoid whenever possible!
Why *p++ is 10 ?
[C11: ยง6.5.2.4/2]: The result of the postfix ++ operator is the value of the operand. As a side effect, the value of the operand object is incremented (that is, the value 1 of the appropriate type is added to it).
The below statement
printf("%u",*p++);
is equivalent to
printf("%u",*p); /* p points to 'a' and value of `a` is 10. Hence, 10 is printed */
p = p + 1;
p is of type pointer-to-int. Hence, 1 is scaled to sizeof (int).
As a result, p now points to an int at address : p + sizeof (int)
I just want to add my five cents.
For incrementing value indirected via pointer you can use ++*ip or (*ip)++. There is a nice explanation about parentheses in K&R book:
The parentheses are necessary in this last example
(*ip)++; without them, them expression
would increment ip instead of what it points to, because
unary operators like * and ++ associate right to left.
And in your piece of code you got 10 because printf will print original value of variable and only after it wiil be incremented by one due of using of postfix ++ operator.

++ Operator on pointers

My CS course is taking a bit of a turn from Java to C. I'm busy going over pointers at the moment and I have come across that the ++ operator for incrementing doens't work when dereferencing. This is more just a curiosity question than anything else. Just not used to the pointers concept just yet. Am I just doing something wrong or is it something to do with pointers?
For example:
*pointer++; Will not increment the value.
*pointer+=1; Will increment the value.
Thanks in advance!
When you want to increment the value you have to make sure you use parenthesis.
(*pointer)++;
*pointer++;
is equivalent to
*(pointer++); // pointer is incremented
and not to
(*pointer)++; // pointee is incremented
*pointer++ increments the pointer variable, not value pointed by it.
int array[4] = {3,5,7,9};
int *pointer = array;
// *pointer equals 3
*pointer++;
// *pointer now equals 5
This has to do with precedence of the operators: post-increment ++ has higher precedence than the dereference operator *, while += has lower precedence in the table of operator precedences. That is why in the first example ++ is applied to the pointer which is dereferenced afterwards, while in the second example += 1 is applied to the result of dereference.
*pointer++; is almost equivalent to:
*pointer;
pointer = pointer + 1;
Why its so?
In expression *pointer++;, ++ is postfix operator, so fist * deference operation performed then ++ increments value of pointer (and not increments value).
Whereas *pointer += 1 is just equivalent to:
*pointer = *pointer + 1;
that increments value pointed by pointer.

Operations on Pointers

#include <stdio.h>
int main()
{
char a[] = "hello";
char *ptr = a;
printf ("%c\n",*ptr++);//it prints character 'h'.
printf ("%c\n",*ptr);//it prints character 'e'.
return 0;
}
As I understand it: In the above code, in *ptr++ expression, both * and ++ have same precedence and operation will take place from right to left, which means pointer will increment first and deference will happen next. So it should print the character 'e' in the first printf statement. But it is not.
So my question is: Where will it store the incremented value (in, *ptr++) if it is not dereferencing that location in first printf statement?
ptr++ means "increment ptr, but return the pre-increment value."
Thus despite the fact that the increment happens first, it is the original, non-incremented pointer that is being dereferenced.
By contrast, if your precedence reasoning is correct, *++ptr should print e as you expect. ++ptr means "increment ptr and return the post-increment value".
Whatever happens is correct.
When doing *ptr ++ it just takes the *ptr value and performs operation as it is a post increment and had you used ++ *ptr it would have printed e in the very first place.
p++ is post increment while ++p is pre increment. p++ gives the values of p and then increments the contents of p while ++p increments the contents of p and then returns the value of p
It will be stored in the pointer ptr itself. It is like making the ptr point to the next byte that it used to point:
ptr = ptr + 1;
yupp, pointer will be autoamticaly incremented after each use.

C - Why am I allowed to do this?

int b[2], *ptr;
b[0] = 5;
b[1] = 7;
ptr = &b[0];
*ptr++ = 66;
printf("%d", *ptr);
Why am I allowed to do the *ptr++ = 66 line even though the = 66 bit seems to do nothing? When I print *ptr it's 7. Can anyone explain why? Shouldn't the compiler complain about the = 66 bit not having an effect?
Isn't *ptr++ = 66 basically equivalent to 7 = 66?
What's happening is this:
b[0] is assigned a value of 66 because you're deferencing ptr, i.e. you're doing *ptr, then performing the assignment
The pointer itself is incremented, i.e. &b[0]++, which becomes &b[1]
ptr is now pointing to b[1], which is 7
To put it another way: the incrementation and the assignment are performed on two totally different things. And since it's a postfix increment, the pointer is incremented after its original address receives a new value.
You're incrementing the pointer. It points to b[1] after that. The value of b[0] is probably 66.
The ptr++ is called post increment, this mean that you first use the old value of ptr (overwriting the 5), then increment ptr.
You increment the pointer. If you want to increment the value of the pointer use (*ptr)++.
See this precedence table

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