Basic and Advance C Question:

Is NULL valid for pointers to functions?

Tweet Share WhatsApp

Answer:

Yes There is no ``total generic pointer type.''
void *'s are only guaranteed to hold object (i.e. data) pointers; it is not portable to convert a function pointer to type void *. (On some machines, function addresses can be very large, bigger than any data pointers.)
It is guaranteed, however, that all function pointers can be interconverted, as long as they are converted back to an appropriate type before calling. Therefore, you can pick any function type (usually int (*)() or void (*)(), that is, pointer to function of unspecified arguments returning int or void) as a generic function pointer. When you need a place to hold object and function pointers interchangeably, the portable solution is to use a union of a void * and a generic function pointer (of whichever type you choose).

Download C Programming PDF Read All 221 C Programming Questions
Previous QuestionNext Question
Why ca not I do something like this?How do I get a null pointer in my programs?