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Home/ Questions/Q 7528761
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 30, 20262026-05-30T04:28:12+00:00 2026-05-30T04:28:12+00:00

Given the following situation: char const a = (i == 0) ? 0 :

  • 0

Given the following situation:

        char const a = (i == 0) ? 0 : copy[i - 1][j];

and

        char const a = (i == 0) ? '\0' : copy[i - 1][j];

Why does the first example produce the following: warning: conversion to ‘char’ from ‘int’ may alter its value [-Wconversion], and yet the second does not.

FWIW, copy is a char**.

This behaviour is not limited to char, the same can be seen for other integer sizes, so it appears it is a matter of promotion.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-30T04:28:13+00:00Added an answer on May 30, 2026 at 4:28 am

    When one result argument to ?: is 0 (an int), the other result argument gets promoted to the same type — C++ requires that both possible results have the same type. Once the promotion is processed, the compiler discards the information about the original type, so at the time the warning is issued, the compiler no longer knows that what it’s warning about had been a char all along. It doesn’t complain about the second argument being demoted to char because it knows the literal 0 is a valid char value.

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