From: jstacey AT plato DOT wadham DOT ox DOT ac DOT uk (J-P) Newsgroups: comp.os.msdos.djgpp Subject: Re: Weird : Segmentation fault on fwrite :( Date: 29 Apr 2000 11:54:37 +0100 Organization: Wadham College Oxford Lines: 29 Message-ID: <8eef1d$ai7$1@plato.wadham.ox.ac.uk> References: <956963090 DOT 719428 AT romulus DOT infonie DOT fr> <20000429101940 DOT A22474 AT chance DOT cz> <957001855 DOT 943830 AT romulus DOT infonie DOT fr> NNTP-Posting-Host: plato.wadham.ox.ac.uk X-Trace: news.ox.ac.uk 957005678 10799 163.1.164.74 (29 Apr 2000 10:54:38 GMT) X-Complaints-To: newsmaster AT ox DOT ac DOT uk NNTP-Posting-Date: 29 Apr 2000 10:54:38 GMT To: djgpp AT delorie DOT com DJ-Gateway: from newsgroup comp.os.msdos.djgpp Reply-To: djgpp AT delorie DOT com In article <957001855 DOT 943830 AT romulus DOT infonie DOT fr>, HPMAN wrote: >Isn't the '&' supposed to be implicit with arrays ? > >Always used an '&' with arrays and worked fine... This misunderstanding suggests you might want to read more about C than about DJGPP: If char arrayname[80] is an array of 80 char, . arrayname is (equivalent to) a pointer to the first char . &arrayname is a pointer to a pointer to the first char So in your example: >fwrite(TestBuff,sizeof(char),32,output); is correct, as TestBuff is pointer-to-char, but: >fwrite(&TestBuff,sizeof(char),32,output); is wrong, because &TestBuff is a pointer-to-pointer-to-char. This is fundamental C programming. Have a look at Kernighan & Ritchie, or possibly the C FAQ. J-P -- innowacyjną architekturą firmy NetManage związanąz