• fluckx@lemmy.world
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    7 months ago

    What I meant was:

    In the screenshot it said x = *(++p) and iirc that is not the same as saying x = *(p++) or x = *(p += 1)

    As in my example using ++p will return the new value after increment and p++ or p+=1 will return the value before the increment happens, and then increment the variable.

    Or at least that is how I remember it working based on other languages.

    I’m not sure what the * does, but I’m assuming it might be a pointer reference? I’ve never really learned how to code in c or c++ specifically. Though in other languages ( like PHP which is based on C ) there is a distinct difference between ++p and (p++ or p+= 1)

    The last two behave the same. Though it has been years since I did a lot of coding. Which is why I asked.

    I’ll install the latest PHP runtime tonight and give it a try xD