learning dragonfly or C...
    Magnus Eriksson 
    magetoo at fastmail.fm
       
    Thu Nov 11 01:21:08 PST 2004
    
    
  
On Thu, 11 Nov 2004, Devon H. O'Dell wrote:
> The statement:
>
> 	vpp = &vp
>
> is ``dereferencing'' vp. Dereferencing effectively provides the address
> in memory of a variable.
> modfunction(int *bar)
> {
>
> 	*bar = 3; /* Change bar to 3 */
> 	printf("%d\n", *bar);
> 	return;
> }
> 	modfunction(&foo);
> This time, we ``dereferenced'' our variable foo (and, on a sidenote, I
> don't know why it's called dereferencing, I think it's a horrible name
> and substitute it mentally with ``grab the address of'' whenever I see
  It's called dereferencing because a pointer is a reference to something,
and dereferencing is the act of doing away with the reference
(de-referencing) and handling what is actually pointed to instead.  So the
opposite of what you said really.  Did you get enough sleep tonight?  :-)
 (but *bar = 3 in modfunction() is dereferencing bar though, if that's
what you meant.)
  I have no idea what the opposite operation (&) is called.  Referencing?
Nah..
Magnus
    
    
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