Pointers count bytes, so to point at the next byte you would need to change a pointer's value by 1. Pointer arithmetic, however, counts the objects pointed to by the pointer, and incrementing a pointer increases its value by the size of its pointee type. If you want to point at bytes, use a char
pointer, since char
has size 1 by definition, and pointer arithmetic on char
pointers is lets you point at bytes:
T * p = get_pointer();
char * cp = reinterpret_cast<char*>(p);
cp += 16;
Casting pointers to and from char types does not constitute type punning and is explicitly allowed by the standard. However, you must not use the resulting pointer to access any objects that aren't actually at that address.
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