#include <iostream> using namespace std; void fn(int* input_ptr) { int *ptr2 = input_ptr; cout << "pointer 2 is " << *ptr2 << endl; } int main() { int *ptr1; *ptr1 = 7; fn(ptr1); } This example works, as I pass a pointer to the function, and assign that to a temporary pointer inside the function, the result shows pointer 2 is also 7. However,
#include <iostream> using namespace std; int main() { int *ptr1; *ptr1 = 7; int *ptr2; *ptr2 = ptr1; // or I have also tried *ptr2 = *ptr1 cout << "pointer 2 is " << *ptr2 << endl; } The same step does not work in the main function. I know you can use the address ptr2 = ptr1 without asterisk and it will work.
However, in the first example, I can directly assign a pointer as a function parameter to a new pointer with asterisk (or called dereferecing?), but in the second example I cannot do that in main function.
Could anyone help with this question? Appreciate your time.
This example works,- You are just lucky.ptr1is not given memory address to point to. You need to usenewto allocate memory