I found this example code and I tried to google what (int (*)[])var1
could stand for, but I got no usefull results.
#include <unistd.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
int i(int n,int m,int var1[n][m]) {
return var1[0][0];
}
int example() {
int *var1 = malloc(100);
return i(10,10,(int (*)[])var1);
}
Normally I work with VLAs in C99 so I am used to:
#include <unistd.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
int i(int n,int m,int var1[n][m]) {
return var1[0][0];
}
int exam开发者_Go百科ple() {
int var1[10][10];
return i(10,10,var1);
}
Thanks!
It means "cast var1 into pointer to array of int".
It's a typecast to a pointer that points to an array of int.
(int (*)[])
is a pointer to an array of int
s. Equivalent to the int[n][m]
function argument.
This is a common idiom in C: first do a malloc to reserve memory, then cast it to the desired type.
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