As a non-C/C++ expert I always considered square brackets and pointers arrays as equal.
ie :
char *my_array_star;
char my_array_square[];
But I noticed that when use in a structure/class they don't behave the same :
typedef struct {
char whatever;
char *my_array_star;
} my_struct_star;
typedef struct {
char whatever;
char my_array_square[];
} my_struct_square;
The line below displays 16, whatever takes 1 byte, my_array_pointer takes 8 bytes.
Due to the padding the total structure size is 16.
printf("my_struct_star: %li\n",sizeof(my_struct_star));
The line below displays 1, whatever takes 1 byte, my_array_pointer isn't taken in account.
printf("my_struct_square: %li\n",sizeof(my_struct_square));
By playing around I noticed that square brackets are used as extra space in the structure
my_struct_square *i=malloc(2);
i->whatever='A';
i->my_array_square[0]='B';
the line blow displays A:
printf("i[0]=%c\n",((char*)i)[0]);
the line blow displays B:
printf("i[1]=%c\n",((char*)i)[1]);
So I cannot say anymore that square brackets are equals to pointers. But I'd like to understand the reason of that behavior. I'm afraid of missing a key concept of that languages.
Thanks in advance, Best regards to all of you

something[]and must define the size of the array. Chose between the two. – Eregrith Feb 17 '12 at 8:29