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On 7/6/2024 7:04 AM, Scott Lurndal wrote:void* a = 0;Janis Papanagnou <janis_papanagnou+ng@hotmail.com> writes:Where:On 06.07.2024 14:54, Kaz Kylheku wrote:>On 2024-07-06, Thiago Adams <thiago.adams@gmail.com> wrote:>If you were creating C code today and could use a C23 compiler, would>
you use nullptr instead of NULL?
In greenfield projects under my dictatorship, I use 0, as in:
>
char *p = 0;
>
I was still 20 something when I (easily) wrapped my head around the 0
null pointer constant, and have not had any problems with it.
Once I learned the standard-defined truth about null pointer constants,
and their relationship to the NULL macro, I dropped NULL like a hot
potato, and didn't look back (except when working in code bases that use
NULL).
We also used 0 as "universal" pointer value regularly without problems.
Whereas I spent 6 years programming on an architecture[*] where a
null pointer was represented in hardware by the value 0xc0eeeeee. I always
use the NULL macro in both C and C++ code.
void* x = 0;
Should be x = 0xc0eeeeee, right?
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