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c - Is the array to pointer decay changed to a pointer object?

int a[] = {1, 2 ,3};

I understand that array names are converted to pointers. A term often used is that they decay to pointers.

However to me, a pointer is a region of memory that holds the address to another region of memory, so:

int *p = a;

can be drawn like this:

-----              -----
  p    --------->  a[0].  .....
-----              -----
 0x1                0x9

But a itself is not pointing to another region of memory, it IS the region of memory itself. So when the compiler converts it to a pointer, does it save it (like p) somewhere in memory or it's an implicit conversion?

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C has objects and values.

A value is an abstract concept—it is some meaning, often mathematical. Numbers have values like 4, 19.5, or ?3. Addresses have values that are locations in memory. Structures have values that are the values of their members considered as an aggregate.

Values can be used in expressions, such as 3 + 4*5. When values are used in expressions, they do not have any memory locations in the computing model that C uses. This includes values that are addresses, such as &x in &x + 3.

Objects are regions of memory whose contents can represent values. The declaration int *p = &x defines p to be an object. Memory is reserved for it, and it is assigned the value &x.

For an array declared with int a[10], a is an object; it is all the memory reserved for 10 int elements.

When a is used in an expression, other than as the operand of sizeof or unary &, the a used in the expression is automatically converted to the address of its first element, &a[0]. This is a value. No memory is reserved for it; it is not an object. It may be used in expressions as a value without any memory ever being reserved for it. Note that the actual a is not converted in any way; when we say a is converted to a pointer, we mean only that an address is produced for use in the expression.

All of the above describes semantics in the computing model C uses, which is that of some abstract computer. In practice, when a compiler works with expressions, it often uses processor registers to manipulate the values in those expressions. Processor registers are a form of memory (they are things in a device that retain values), but they are not the “main memory” we often mean when we speak of “memory” without qualification. However, a compiler may also not have the values in any memory at all because it calculates the expression in part or in full during compilation, so the expression that is actually computed when the program is executing might not include all the values that are nominally in the expression as it is written in C. And a compiler might also have the values in main memory because computing a complicated expression might overflow what is feasible in the processor registers, so that parts of the expression have to be temporarily stored in main memory (often on a hardware stack).


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