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C multiple single line declarations

What happens when I declare say mul开发者_C百科tiple variables on a single line? e.g.

int x, y, z;

All are ints. The question is what are y and z in the following statement?

int* x, y, z;

Are they all int pointers?


Only x is a pointer to int; y and z are regular ints.

This is one aspect of C declaration syntax that trips some people up. C uses the concept of a declarator, which introduces the name of the thing being declared along with additional type information not provided by the type specifier. In the declaration

int* x, y, z;

the declarators are *x, y, and z (it's an accident of C syntax that you can write either int* x or int *x, and this question is one of several reasons why I recommend using the second style). The int-ness of x, y, and z is specified by the type specifier int, while the pointer-ness of x is specified by the declarator *x (IOW, the expression *x has type int).

If you want all three objects to be pointers, you have two choices. You can either declare them as pointers explicitly:

int *x, *y, *z;

or you can create a typedef for an int pointer:

typedef int *iptr;
iptr x, y, z;

Just remember that when declaring a pointer, the * is part of the variable name, not the type.


In your first sentence:

int x, y, z;

They are all ints.

However, in the second one:

int* x, y, z;

Only x is a pointer to int. y and z are plain ints.

If you want them all to be pointers to ints you need to do:

int *x, *y, *z;


Only x is an int pointer. Y and Z will be just int. If you want three pointers:

int * x, * y, * z;


It is important to know that, in C, declaration mimics usage. The * unary operator is right associative in C. So, for example in int *x x is of the type pointer to an int (or int-star) and in int x, x is of type int.

As others have also mentioned, in int* x, y, z; the C compiler declares x as an int-star and, y and z as integer.

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