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Home/ Questions/Q 7011051
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 27, 20262026-05-27T22:04:40+00:00 2026-05-27T22:04:40+00:00

I’m learning pointers, and gotten stuck for an hour now, with this code, #include

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I’m learning pointers, and gotten stuck for an hour now, with this code,

#include <stdio.h>

int determinant(int **mat)  /* int mat[3][3] works fine.. int *mat[3] doesn't.. neither does int *mat[] */
{
    int det;
    int a=*(*(mat+0)+0); // printf("\n%d",a);
    int b=*(*(mat+0)+1); // printf("\n%d",b);
    int c=*(*(mat+0)+2); // printf("\n%d",c);
    int d=*(*(mat+1)+0); // printf("\n%d",d);
    int e=*(*(mat+1)+1); // printf("\n%d",e);
    int f=*(*(mat+1)+2); // printf("\n%d",f);
    int g=*(*(mat+2)+0); // printf("\n%d",g);
    int h=*(*(mat+2)+1); // printf("\n%d",h);
    int i=*(*(mat+2)+2); // printf("\n%d",i);

    det = a*(e*i-h*f) - b*(d*i-g*f) + c*(d*h-e*g);
    return det;
}

int main()
{
    int mat[3][3];
    int i,j;
    printf("Enter the 3 X 3 matrix:\n\n");
    for (i=0;i<3;i++)
    {
        for (j=0;j<3;j++)
        {
            scanf("%d",*(mat+i)+j);
        }
    }
    printf("\nThe determinant of the given 3 X 3 matrix is %d",determinant(mat));
    return 0;
}

I don’t think anything is wrong with the function call. Maybe the problem is while accepting the arguments. Idk, isn’t mat a pointer to an 1-dimensional array, which would again be a pointer to the array element, making mat a pointer to a pointer?
When I print some text at places (just to check), i find that the execution goes till after int det in the function, and the program crashes in the next step.
mat [3][3] works well, but i wanna use some * there, because as i said, i’m ‘learning’..

Please help!
Thanks 🙂

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-27T22:04:40+00:00Added an answer on May 27, 2026 at 10:04 pm

    2D array dont decay to pointer to pointer. You can decay them to pointers so your code should look like

    int determinant(int *mat) {
      int det;
      int a=*((mat+0)+0); // printf("\n%d",a);
      int b=*((mat+0)+1); // printf("\n%d",b);
      int c=*((mat+0)+2); // printf("\n%d",c);
      int d=*((mat+1*3)+0); // printf("\n%d",d);
      int e=*((mat+1*3)+1); // printf("\n%d",e);
      int f=*((mat+1*3)+2); // printf("\n%d",f);
      int g=*((mat+2*3)+0); // printf("\n%d",g);
      int h=*((mat+2*3)+1); // printf("\n%d",h);
      int i=*((mat+2*3)+2); // printf("\n%d",i);
    
      det = a*(e*i-h*f) - b*(d*i-g*f) + c*(d*h-e*g);
      return det;
    }
    

    The above code is just for illustration, showing how 2-D array decays to 1-D array.

    When you try to access the array using braces like a[2][1] then compiler does is unfolding for you. By unfolding I mean, the multiplication by sizeof(type) (as shown above multiply by 3). So if you decaying to 1-D you have to do it yourself.

    One more thing to add, always pass the size of the dimension to the function who is has to tread the 1-D array as 2-D. like

    int determinant(int *mat, int cols, rows);
    

    Edit 1:

    Just to add that @JensGustedt ans is also ok if you want to keep the arrays intact across function calls.

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