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How i got this ans explain please i want to know how 1 i got in printf ("%d", p<q) ;

https://code.sololearn.com/cxwccrZT3JD4/?ref=app

13th Oct 2020, 10:23 AM
Habit🧐
Habit🧐 - avatar
5 Respostas
+ 1
Habit 🧐 p is not pointing to a[4] and q to a[2] ,they are still pointing to the a[1] for p and a[5] for q , Doing this operation => *(p+3) doesn't actually makes the pointer assign new location ,it just adds to address 3 values and gets the item from there
13th Oct 2020, 10:55 AM
Abhay
Abhay - avatar
+ 1
Habit 🧐 I made some edit, you aren't actually moving the pointer but you are just getting it's address and adding to it 3 and using * gets the value from that location
13th Oct 2020, 10:58 AM
Abhay
Abhay - avatar
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#include <stdio.h> int main() { int a[]={5,16,7,89,45,32,23,10}; int *p= &a[1],*q=&a[5]; // *p points to 16, *q points 32 printf ("%d\n",*(p+3)); // *(p+3) return 45 that is a[4] printf ("%d\n",*(q-3)); // *(q-3) return 7 that is a[2] printf ("%ld\n",q-p); // q points to 5th element in array p points to 2nd elementin array , (q-p) return number of elements *int size printf ("%d",p<q); //p is first location ,q is next location p<q true printf ("%d",*p<*q); //16<32 return 0; } Edit: @Habit it's pointing to next location by calculation. But its not updating pointers locations...
13th Oct 2020, 10:43 AM
Jayakrishna 🇼🇳
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But p now a[4] and q now a[2] than how is true and 16 <32 true (1)? 🙄
13th Oct 2020, 10:47 AM
Habit🧐
Habit🧐 - avatar
0
Now i understand thanks đŸ€Ș
13th Oct 2020, 10:56 AM
Habit🧐
Habit🧐 - avatar