6:50 AM
@JL2210 That's rather non-standard syntax in C, too... Why in the world would you want to try and do this in a single line?
Write it: size_t temp = 123; foo(&temp);
That works for both C and C++.
The real "more C++ way to do it" would be not to pass a pointer in the first place. And very likely to reconsider the higher-level design so you didn't need to do this at all.
@Kyll Nope. For fun, try outputting the value of the expression sizeof('a')
(which returns the compile-time size, in bytes, of the operand; in this case, a character literal).
Character literals are of type int
in C, whereas they are of type char
in C++, so the sizes will be vastly different (generally 4 and 1, respectively, on common architectures).
Best to think of C and C++ as merely having similar syntax, much like C++ and Java do. They're curly-brace languages, but that's about where the similarities end. What they have in common is largely the superficial. That makes it all the more confusing, of course, because, as with C++ and Java, you can often get away with writing C code in C++, and it'll "work".