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Home/ Questions/Q 3279714
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 17, 20262026-05-17T19:37:25+00:00 2026-05-17T19:37:25+00:00

I have been trying to create a pointer variable in the called function and

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I have been trying to create a pointer variable in the called function and somehow pass the value pointed by it to the main function. I wrote a few sample programs but it i still seem to be missing something out. and the challenge was to achieve this using pointers to pointers to pointers. Here is the code that I wrote and tested. I think am missing something obvious, can you guys point it. Thanks.

        int one(int ***ptr)
        {
            static int *p,**pp,b=10;
            p=&b;
            pp=&p;
            ptr=&pp;
            printf("b:%d\tp:%d\tpp:%d\n",b,*p,**pp);
            printf("Sub Ptr:%d\n",***ptr);
            printf("Address of ***ptr:%d\n",&ptr);
            return 32;
        }
        int main(int argc, char *argv[])
        {
              static int ***ptr;
              int a=200,*b,**c;
              b=&a;
              c=&b;
              ptr=&c;
              printf("Main Ptr:%d\n",&ptr);
              a=one(ptr);
              printf("Main Ptr:%d\n",&ptr);
              printf("Main Ptr:%d\n",***ptr);
              system("PAUSE");
              return 0;
        }

I get an output of 32 which is the return value of the function. Is it possible to get the value of 10 which is pointed in the called function.

I also tried global declaration but din work either. I would like to maintain the local declaration and see if its possible…

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-17T19:37:26+00:00Added an answer on May 17, 2026 at 7:37 pm

    I think you misunderstood about pointers. The problem of your code is that you didn’t realize that pointer is also “pass by value”, the pointer in the function is another variable on the stack, instead of the one you declare in the main function.

    I would use a more simple example, but the idea is the same.

    void changePointerValue (int * ptr) 
    {
        int newValue = 10;
        ptr = &newValue;
    }
    
    int main () 
    {
        int x = 20;
        int * ptr = &x;
        changePointerValue (ptr);
        printf ("After Change: %d\n", *ptr);
    }
    

    What value do you think it will output in main function? Is that be 10?

    But no, in fact, it will output 20.

    Why? Let’s look what our code does. In the line of chagePointerValue(ptr), the computer copy the value of ptr in the main function to a new varaible on stack, let’s call it ptr’ and pass it to the changePointerValue function.

    So in fact the ptr in the changePointerValue function is ptr’, not the one you declare in the main function. The second line of changePointerValue, you assigned a new memory address to ptr’, and after that, ptr’ is discarded because the function is returned. The ptr in the main function remains the same value, which is the memory address pointed to x.

    If you want the output to be 10, you need deference ptr in the changePointerValue, and the assignement will means ‘Change the value where the ptr is pointed at’.

    void changePointerValue (int * ptr) 
    {
        int newValue = 10;
        *ptr = newValue;   // Now you are change the content of the memroy cell where ptr is pointed at.
    }
    
    int main () 
    {
        int x = 20;
        int * ptr = &a;
        printf ("Before Change:%d", x); // 20
        printf ("Before Change:%d", *ptr); // 20
        changePointerValue (ptr);
        printf ("After Change: %d\n", *ptr); // 10
        printf ("After Change: %d\n", x); //10
    }
    

    Edit:

    So, if you want it print 10 in the main function, the correct way to do this is deference ptr in the function. But this will also change the value of variable a in the main function.

        int one(int ***ptr)
        {
            ***ptr=10; // Dereference ptr to where it points to. (Varaible a in the main function)
            return 32;
        }
        int main(int argc, char *argv[])
        {
              static int ***ptr;
              int a=200,*b,**c;
              int result;
              b=&a;
              c=&b;
              ptr=&c;
              printf("Main Ptr:%d\n",&ptr); // The memory address of variable ptr.
              result=one(ptr);
              printf("Main Ptr:%d\n",&ptr); // the memory address of variable ptr.
              printf("Main Ptr:%d\n",***ptr); // 10
              printf("Main a:%d\n", a); // 10
              printf("Main result:%d\n", result); //32
              system("PAUSE");
              return 0;
        }
    
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