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C - Why no output?
Does *str point to nothing? char *str = "12345"; printf("%s",*str);
8 Réponses
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Yes even I encountered this question in the c challenges. the reason is simple %s cannot be used with a char*. This would help getting the complete string.
Printf ("%s",str);
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* is used when you want to access single element,
printf("%c",*str); // prints 1
printf("%c",*(str+2)); //prints 3
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I'm guessing it's due to the use of %s format specifier - which was meant for string, not a char. *s dereference the <str> and returns the first character in <str> ('1'). Expecting more details from others.
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Paolo De Nictolis
Because you use the wrong format specifier ,the %s is basically used for the string not for character......
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remove * before str,
printf("%s",str);
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Adding to what everyone have said, the s format specifier requires the pointer to the initial character as its argument, and then the function will dereference that pointer on its own. You pass *str as its argument, *str has the value of 49 (the character '1'), so the function dereference that value which causes segmentation fault, or no output in SL playground
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Because it already pointer. Try char *p2 = "54321";
printf ("%s",p2);
return 0;
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%s expects char * by writing * before str u are passing char str which in case is 1. If u wanna see string just remove *. If u wanna see output from *str change %s to %c which is for char s