Question

In reference to the thread: memmove implementation in C, I did not understand why would there be a memory overlap for 2 different variables? i.e. is this a normal scenario that the compiler allocates same 'common space' to 2 different variables and why is this policy used by compilers in such cases?

Was it helpful?

Solution

Nothing to do with the compiler. Consider the following:

int x[100];

memmove(&x[1], &x[0], 99*sizeof(int));

OTHER TIPS

It's not really about the compiler creating variables that overlap. It's simply that the specification of memmove says it has to work, even if the source and destination overlap. If there's no chance of the two overlapping, you usually want to use memcpy, which will usually be faster, but gives undefined behavior if they do overlap.

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