Possible Duplicate:
In C arrays why is this true? a[5] == 5[a]
How is it possible that this is valid C++?
void main()
{
int x = 1["WTF?"];
}
On VC++10 this compiles and in debug mode the value of x is 84 after the statement.
What's going on?
Possible Duplicate:
In C arrays why is this true? a[5] == 5[a]
How is it possible that this is valid C++?
void main()
{
int x = 1["WTF?"];
}
On VC++10 this compiles and in debug mode the value of x is 84 after the statement.
What's going on?
Array subscript operator is commutative. It's equivalent to int x = "WTF?"[1]; Here, "WTF?" is an array of 5 chars (it includes null terminator), and [1] gives us the second char, which is 'T' - implicitly converted to int it gives value 84.
Offtopic: The code snippet isn't valid C++, actually - main must return int.
You can read more in-depth discussion here: In C arrays why is this true? a[5] == 5[a]
The reason why this works is that when the built-in operator [] is applied to a pointer and an int, a[b] is equivalent to *(a+b). Which (addition being commutative) is equivalent to *(b+a), which, by definition of [], is equivalent to b[a].