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Home/ Questions/Q 7759961
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 1, 20262026-06-01T13:45:31+00:00 2026-06-01T13:45:31+00:00

I want to do WriteProcessMemory In C++ using Dword or Int, without storing it

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I want to do WriteProcessMemory In C++ using Dword or Int, without storing it in a Variable i found one way to do this but i can only do it with bytes. does anyone know how to do this??
this one works using bytes.

WriteProcessMemory(hProcess, (void*)(BasePointer + 0x728),"\x90\x90", 4, NULL);

Thanks for the help everyone i made a function and its working really good

void WriteMemory(DWORD Address,DWORD NewValue, int NewValueSize)
{
    WriteProcessMemory(hProcess, (void*)Address, (void*)&NewValue, NewValueSize, NULL);
}

int main()
{
    srand(time(0));
    GetProcess();
    WriteMemory((BasePointer + 0x6F8),2+rand()%65500,2);
    CloseHandle(hProcess);
    return 0;
}
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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-01T13:45:32+00:00Added an answer on June 1, 2026 at 1:45 pm

    The reason your code “works” with bytes is that you’re using a string literal. A string literal is an array of char, and an array of char automatically converts to a pointer to the first element if the context calls for it, as it does when you try to pass one as the third argument of WriteProcessMemory.

    You can write any value you want as a string literal, including a four-byte DWord, as long as you’re willing to express it one byte at a time. For example, "\x70\x71\x72\x73". On Windows, that’s equivalent to a pointer to the DWord value 0x73727170. You probably won’t want to do that, though; expressing numbers like that is tedious.

    C++ doesn’t offer any facility for having literal arrays of non-char type. There’s just not much demand for it. Demand for literal char arrays is high because everyone deals with text, so we want easy ways of expressing it in our code. Although everyone also works with numbers, we rarely have need to express blobs of numerical data in our code, especially not mid-expression.

    You haven’t given a practical problem to be solved by your question. You’re just asking whether something is possible to do. I’m sorry to be the bearer of bad news, but the answer is that what you’re asking for cannot be done in C++. You’ll just have to do like everyone else and declare a variable. Variables are cheap; feel free to use them whenever the need arises. Nonetheless, you’ve been shown ways to keep your code concise by using subroutines. Macros can also help shorten your code, if that’s your goal.

    Please also note that the string literal in your code is an array of three characters — the two between quotation marks, plus the nul character the compiler automatically includes at the end of all string literals. You’re telling the function that you’ve provided a pointer to a block of four bytes, which is false. the fourth byte that the function writes into the other process will have an unspecified value.

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