<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: | On 26 Apr 2006, Gabriel Dos Reis wrote: | | > <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: | > | > | It is gcc 4.1.0, --target=arm-elf compiled on an Intel platform and | > | GNU/Linux. | > | | > | The following construct: | > | | > | void *p; | > | | > | ((char *)p)++; | > | | > | makes the compiler to issue an error message, namely | > | "invalid lvalue in increment" | > | | > | The ((char *)p) construct is perfectly valid object, a char pointer which | > | can be lvalue and rvalue alike. For some reason gcc 4.1.0 (and 4.0.2 as | > | well) treats ((SOME_TYPE *)p) as if it could not be an lvalue; | > | > indeed, it is not; in any ISO C version I know of. | | OK - my bad. Wrote first thought later. Old gcc accepted the construct and | legacy code broke on the new compiler. My sincere apologies. | | The question, however, remains: (how) can I tell the compiler to treat a | pointer declared as void *p; as if it was a SOME_TYPE *p pointer without | introducing temporaries?
You have to use a cast, and the result is not an lvalue. Period. Or, use the original pointer SOME_TYPE *p. -- Gaby