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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 16, 20262026-05-16T02:19:16+00:00 2026-05-16T02:19:16+00:00

Suppose I have a function which takes variadic arguments ( … ) or a

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Suppose I have a function which takes variadic arguments (...) or a va_list passed from another such function. The main logic is in this function itself (let’s call it f1), but I want to have it pass the va_list to another function (let’s call it f2) which will determine the next argument type, obtain it using va_arg, and properly convert and store it for the caller to use.

Is it sufficient to pass a va_list to f2, or is it necessary to pass a pointer to va_list. Unless va_list is required to be an array type or else store its position data at the location the va_list object points to (rather than in the object itself), I can’t see how passing it by value could allow the calling function (f1) to ‘see’ the changes the called function made by va_arg.

Can anyone shed light on this? I’m interested in what the standard requires, not what some particular implementation allows.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-16T02:19:17+00:00Added an answer on May 16, 2026 at 2:19 am

    It looks like you’ll need to pass a pointer to the va_list. For more info, see the C99 standard document section 7.15.In particular, bullet point 3 states:

    The object ap may be passed as an argument to
    another function; if that function invokes the va_arg macro with parameter ap, the
    value of ap in the calling function is indeterminate
    and shall be passed to the va_end
    macro prior to any further reference to ap

    [my italics]

    Edit: Just noticed a footnote in the standard:

    215) It is permitted to create a pointer to a va_list and pass that pointer to another function, in which
    case the original function may make further use of the original list after the other function returns

    So you can pass a pointer to the va_list and do va_arg(*va_list_pointer) in the called function.

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