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Home/ Questions/Q 887991
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 15, 20262026-05-15T13:19:13+00:00 2026-05-15T13:19:13+00:00

I have argument with my friend. He says that I can return a pointer

  • 0

I have argument with my friend. He says that I can return a pointer to local data from a function. This is not what I have learned but I can’t find a counterargument for him to prove my knowledge.

Here is illustrated case:

char *name() {
    char n[10] = "bodacydo!";
    return n;
}

And it’s used as:

int main() {
    char *n = name();
    printf("%s\n", n);
}

He says this is perfectly OK because after a program calls name, it returns a pointer to n, and right after that it just prints it. Nothing else happens in the program meanwhile, because it’s single threaded and execution is serial.

I can’t find a counter-argument. I would never write code like that, but he’s stubborn and says this is completely ok. If I was his boss, I would fire him for being a stubborn idiot, but I can’t find a counter argument.

Another example:

int *number() {
    int n = 5;
    return &n;
}

int main() {
    int *a = number();
    int b = 9;
    int c = *a * b;
    printf("%d\n", c);
}

I will send him this link after I get some good answers, so he at least learns something.

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-15T13:19:14+00:00Added an answer on May 15, 2026 at 1:19 pm

    you will get a problem, when you call another function between name() and printf(), which itself uses the stack

    char *fun(char *what) {
       char res[10];
       strncpy(res, what, 9);
       return res;
    }
    
    main() {
      char *r1 = fun("bla");
      char *r2 = fun("blubber");
      printf("'%s' is bla and '%s' is blubber", r1, r2);
    }
    
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