I'm very much confused about the const
keyword. I have a function accepting an array of strings as input parameter and a function accepting a variable number of arguments.
void dtree_joinpaths(char* output_buffer, int count, ...);
void dtree_joinpaths_a(char* output_buffer, int count, const char** paths);
dtree_joinpaths
internally invokes dtree_joinpaths_a
after it has built an array of strings from the argument list.
void dtree_joinpaths(char* output_buffer, int count, ...) {
int i;
va_list arg_list;
va_start(arg_list, count);
char** paths = malloc(sizeof(char*) * count);
for (i=0; i < count; i++) {
paths[i] = va_arg(arg_list, char*);
}
va_end(arg_list);
dtree_joinpaths_a(output_buffer, count, paths);
}
But the gcc
compiler gives me the following error message:
src/dtree_path.c: In function 'dtree_joinpaths':
src/dtree_path.c:65: warning: passing argument 3 of 'dtree_joinpaths_a' from incompatible pointer type
When I change char** paths = malloc(count);
to const char** paths = malloc(count);
, this error is not showing up anymore. What I don't understand is, that
- I thought a pointer to an address can always be casted to a const pointer, but not the other way round (which is what is happening here imo).
- This example works: http://codepad.org/mcPCMk3f
What am I doing wrong, or where is my missunderstanding?
Edit
My intent is to make the memory of the input data immutable for the function. (in this case the paths
parameter).
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