Why do most C programmers name variables like this:
int *myVariable;
rather than like this:
int* myVariable;
Both are valid. It seems to me that the asterisk is a part of the type, not a part of the variable name. Can anyone explain this logic?
They are EXACTLY equivalent.
However, in:
int *myVariable, myVariable2;
It seems obvious that myVariable
has type int*
, while myVariable2
has type int
.
In
int* myVariable, myVariable2;
it may seem implied that both are of type int*
, but that is not correct as myVariable2
has type int
.
Therefore, the first programming style is more intuitive.