Reputation: 703
Being new to C, the only practical usage I have gotten out of void pointers is for versatile functions that may store different data types in a given pointer. Therefore I did not type-cast my pointer when doing memory allocation.
I have seen some code examples that sometimes use void pointers, but they get type-cast. Why is this useful? Why not directly create desired type of pointer instead of a void?
Upvotes: 30
Views: 87743
Reputation: 4953
There are two reasons for casting a void pointer to another type in C.
*(int*)p = 42
)The reason for 1 should be obvious. Number two is because C++ disallows the implicit conversion from void*
to other types, while C allows it.
Upvotes: 22
Reputation: 10971
You need to cast void pointers to something else if you want to dereference them, for instance you get a void pointer as a function parameter and you know for sure this is an integer:
void some_function(void * some_param) {
int some_value = *some_param; /* won't work, you can't dereference a void pointer */
}
void some_function(void * some_param) {
int some_value = *((int *) some_param); /* ok */
}
Upvotes: 18