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Home/ Questions/Q 195571
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 11, 20262026-05-11T16:41:37+00:00 2026-05-11T16:41:37+00:00

In ANSI C, offsetof is defined as below. #define offsetof(st, m) \ ((size_t) (

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In ANSI C, offsetof is defined as below.

#define offsetof(st, m) \
    ((size_t) ( (char *)&((st *)(0))->m - (char *)0 ))

Why won’t this throw a segmentation fault since we are dereferencing a NULL pointer? Or is this some sort of compiler hack where it sees that only address of the offset is taken out, so it statically calculates the address without actually dereferencing it? Also is this code portable?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-11T16:41:37+00:00Added an answer on May 11, 2026 at 4:41 pm

    At no point in the above code is anything dereferenced. A dereference occurs when the * or -> is used on an address value to find referenced value. The only use of * above is in a type declaration for the purpose of casting.

    The -> operator is used above but it’s not used to access the value. Instead it’s used to grab the address of the value. Here is a non-macro code sample that should make it a bit clearer

    SomeType *pSomeType = GetTheValue();
    int* pMember = &(pSomeType->SomeIntMember);
    

    The second line does not actually cause a dereference (implementation dependent). It simply returns the address of SomeIntMember within the pSomeType value.

    What you see is a lot of casting between arbitrary types and char pointers. The reason for char is that it’s one of the only type (perhaps the only) type in the C89 standard which has an explicit size. The size is 1. By ensuring the size is one, the above code can do the evil magic of calculating the true offset of the value.

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