Consider the code:
void foo(char a[]){
a++; // works fine, gets compiled
//...
}
Now, consider this:
void foo(){
char a[50];
a++; // Compiler error
//...
}
I heard an array is equivalent to a constant pointer and can't be incremented as it is not a lvalue...
Then why does first code gets compiled, is it so because array arguments to functions are passed as a pointer, i.e. T[] is converted to T* for passing..
So, foo(a) passes a as a pointer.
But is it not back converted to T[] again because is declared as:
void foo(char a[]);
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