Why is the output of the following program 84215045
?
int grid[110];
int main()
{
memset(grid, 5, 100 * sizeof(int));
printf("%d", grid[0]);
return 0;
}
See Question&Answers more detail:osWhy is the output of the following program 84215045
?
int grid[110];
int main()
{
memset(grid, 5, 100 * sizeof(int));
printf("%d", grid[0]);
return 0;
}
See Question&Answers more detail:osmemset
sets each byte of the destination buffer to the specified value. On your system, an int
is four bytes, each of which is 5 after the call to memset
. Thus, grid[0]
has the value 0x05050505
(hexadecimal), which is 84215045
in decimal.
Some platforms provide alternative APIs to memset
that write wider patterns to the destination buffer; for example, on OS X or iOS, you could use:
int pattern = 5;
memset_pattern4(grid, &pattern, sizeof grid);
to get the behavior that you seem to expect. What platform are you targeting?
In C++, you should just use std::fill_n
:
std::fill_n(grid, 100, 5);