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Home/ Questions/Q 3433610
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 18, 20262026-05-18T07:35:49+00:00 2026-05-18T07:35:49+00:00

this is the 2nd part of the 1st question using c# pointers so pointers

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this is the 2nd part of the 1st question using c# pointers

so pointers in c# are ‘unsafe’ and not managed by the garbage collector while an IntPtr is a managed object. but why use pointers then? and when it is possible to use both approaches interchangeably?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-18T07:35:50+00:00Added an answer on May 18, 2026 at 7:35 am

    The CLI distinguishes between managed and unmanaged pointers. A managed pointer is typed, the type of the pointed-to value is known by the runtime and only type-safe assignments are allowed. Unmanaged pointers are only directly usable in a language that supports them, C++/CLI is the best example.

    The equivalent of an unmanaged pointer in the C# language is IntPtr. You can freely convert a pointer back and forth with a cast. No pointer type is associated with it even though its name sounds like “pointer to int”, it is the equivalent of void* in C/C++. Using such a pointer requires pinvoke, the Marshal class or a cast to a managed pointer type.

    Some code to play with:

    using System;
    using System.Runtime.InteropServices;
    
    unsafe class Program {
        static void Main(string[] args) {
            int variable = 42;
            int* p = &variable;
            Console.WriteLine(*p);
            IntPtr raw = (IntPtr)p;
            Marshal.WriteInt32(raw, 666);
            p = (int*)raw;
            Console.WriteLine(*p);
            Console.ReadLine();
        }
    }
    

    Note how the unsafe keyword is appropriate here. You can call Marshal.WriteInt64() and you get no complaint whatsoever. It corrupts the stack frame.

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