What is the difference between these two in terms of memory allocation.
char *p1 = "hello";
char p2[] = "hello";
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What is the difference between these two in terms of memory allocation.
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The first one creates a pointer variable (four or eight bytes of storage depending on the platform) and stores a location of a string literal there, The second one creates an array of six characters (including zero string terminator byte) and copies the literal there. You should get a compiler warning on the first line since the literal is |
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The first one is a non-const pointer to const (read-only) data, the second is a non-const array. |
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Since the first one is a non-const pointer to const (read-only) data, the second is a non-const array, as Paul said, you can write:
But you cannot write:
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const char*! – rubenvb Jan 13 '11 at 13:21