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02:10
@DrorK. To store an array of strings. I was wondering what would be the difference between something like:
`char *str[] = { "Foo", "Bar" }`
and
`char str[][] = { "Foo", "Bar" }`
 
5 hours later…
07:35
the first type of strings are char*, while the second are char[], this difference would manifest after using these stings in functions
 
2 hours later…
09:32
Hello.
Miss me?
 
2 hours later…
11:13
@vihan Unfortunately your second example isn't valid, so it's not a very good one
@vihan The first example describes an array of pointers, pointing to string literals. The second example is assumed to be using string literals as initializers to a 2 dimensional array, array of arrays
The first one, makes writing to the strings 'undefined behavior', isn't required to be allowed
The second one is assumed to be writable
@vihan I hope this will help a bit: c-faq.com/decl/strlitinit.html
11:33
\o Stupid question:
I have:
int a = 5;
int *ptr = NULL;
int **ptr_ptr = &ptr;

Will this work:
int *other = *ptr_ptr;
other = &a;

same as this:
(*ptr_ptr) = &a;
11:44
Ok, it doesn't.
 
1 hour later…
12:56
hi
 
8 hours later…
21:13
@Kubuxu lol they are completely different
have you figured out what you did in "will this work" part ?
you did something like a=0;a=1;
at the end it is always a=1
the address of a will be affected to other independently of ptr_ptr

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