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> it is possible (it’s not really stable but works reliably in recursive calls IIRC). [...] I do not like this attitude You might want to listen. You’re getting the K&R comment and the downvotes because this does not work, ever. It’s a really, really bad idea. In recursive calls, it might not crash right away, but you will have bad data, the memory at the pointer address will have been overwritten by the next stack frame that’s placed there. Don’t ever return pointers to local memory because the memory is “gone” and unsafe to use the moment your function returns. Even if you try it and think it works, it can and probably will crash or run incorrectly in any other scenario - different person, different computer, different compiler, different day... Your comments about getting a warning and ‘However if you wrap the local’s address... it “works”’ should be clues. The warning is the compiler telling you not to do it. The workaround doesn’t work, it only compiles. By using aliasing, you’re only tricking the compiler into not warning you, but the warning is there for a reason. |
I would have preferred to be told:
- yes and no. You'll get warnings if you try to return a pointer to a local, however, doing this and that, you can manage to do it.
- but once you have achieved that, the result will be dependent on the way the stack is handled (not really in your control). You'll feel some comfort doing this in recursive calls, however beware of signal.h.
But this isn't the answer I received. I guess C programmers do not know the difference between what you can do (however risky) and what you shouldn't do. Also when someone asks such "weird" questions, do not assume he's a beginner with no notion of what constructs he can handle safely, maybe he's someone trying to find the limits of C – and once these limits are identified it can be a good conversation starter about C's internal and the way various compilers differ.
Edit: also downvotes on HN are not like downvotes on Reddit: there's actually a limit (-2 ?). Below this the comment disappears. Conclusion: only downvote when the comment engages in antisocial behavior (not respecting the rules or common human decency, etc ...), not when you disagree with it. I always upvote an unfairly downvoted comment for these reasons.