Sunday, 2 February 2014

With C arrays, why is it the case that a[5] == 5[a] ?

The C standard defines the [] operator as follows:
a[b] == *(a + b)
Therefore a[5] will evaluate to:
*(a + 5)
and 5[a] will evaluate to:
*(5 + a)
and from elementary school math we know those are equal.
This is the direct artifact of arrays behaving as pointers, "a" is a memory address. "a[5]" is the value that's 5 elements further from "a". The address of this element is "a + 5". This is equal to offset "a" from "5" elements at the beginning of the address space (5 + a).

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