| ??? 05/29/05 20:31 Read: times Msg Score: +1 +1 Informative |
#94096 - Not Exactly Responding to: ???'s previous message |
You can access the same memory with differently typed pointers. This will give you the same effect as a union.
There are may tricks with pointers. That is why they are powerful and dangerous. |
| Topic | Author | Date |
| Unions in C | 01/01/70 00:00 | |
| You miss the point completely... | 01/01/70 00:00 | |
| Easy with Union | 01/01/70 00:00 | |
| You can see from the Raghu example... | 01/01/70 00:00 | |
| Platform-dependence | 01/01/70 00:00 | |
| Padding in unions | 01/01/70 00:00 | |
| portability | 01/01/70 00:00 | |
| array=pointer...? | 01/01/70 00:00 | |
| array != pointer | 01/01/70 00:00 | |
| Quirk of C | 01/01/70 00:00 | |
| Read the FAQ | 01/01/70 00:00 | |
| Read the Comment | 01/01/70 00:00 | |
| Read everything | 01/01/70 00:00 | |
| Looks the same to me | 01/01/70 00:00 | |
| This One | 01/01/70 00:00 | |
| That's the problem | 01/01/70 00:00 | |
| Good example | 01/01/70 00:00 | |
| No fun | 01/01/70 00:00 | |
| Well... | 01/01/70 00:00 | |
| Of course it does! | 01/01/70 00:00 | |
| Hmm | 01/01/70 00:00 | |
| Actually, even less. | 01/01/70 00:00 | |
| const pointer | 01/01/70 00:00 | |
| O.K you win | 01/01/70 00:00 | |
| Please conclude | 01/01/70 00:00 | |
| Not Exactly | 01/01/70 00:00 | |
End of wrong stick? | 01/01/70 00:00 |



