I am trying to understand following piece of code, but I am confused between "\0" and '\0'.I know its silly but kindly help me out
#define MAX_HISTORY 20
char *pStr = "\0";
for(x=0;x<MAX_HISTORY;x++){
str_temp = (char *)malloc((strlen(pStr)+1)*sizeof(char));
if (str_temp=='\0'){
return 1;
}
memset(str_temp, '\0', strlen(pStr) );
strcpy(str_temp, pStr);
They are different.
"\0" is a string literal which has two consecutive 0's and is roughly equivalent to:
const char a[2] = { '\0', '\0' };
'\0' is an int with value 0. You can always 0 wherever you need to use '\0'.
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