Is NULL guaranteed to be 0?

Is NULL guaranteed to be 0?

According to the standard, NULL is a null pointer constant (i.e. literal). Exactly which one, is implementation defined.

Prior to C++11, null pointer constants were integral constants whose integral value is equal to 0, so 0 or 0l etc.

Since C++11, there is a new null pointer literal nullptr and NULL may be defined as being nullptr. (And thus literal interpretation of Bjarne's quote has become obsolete).

Prior to standardisation: NULL may be defined as (void*)0 in C. Since C++ was based on C, it is likely that some C++ dialects pre-dating the standard might have used that definition, but such definition is not conformant with standard C++.


And for completeness: As explained in more detail in SO post linked in a comment below, null pointer constant being 0 does not necessarily mean that the value of the null pointer address is 0 (although the address being 0 is quite typical).

What can be concluded about this:

  • Don't use NULL to represent the number zero (use 0 with appropriate type suffix if appropriate), nor to represent a null-terminator character (use '\0').
  • Don't assume that NULL resolves to a pointer overload.
  • To represent a null pointer, don't use NULL but instead use nullptr if your standard is >= C++11. In older standard you can use (T*)NULL or (T*)0 if you need it for overload resolution... that said there are probably very few cases where overloading integers with pointers makes any sense.
  • Consider that the definition may differ when converting from C to C++ and vice versa.
  • Don't memset (or type pun) zero bits into a pointer. That's not guaranteed to be the null pointer.

Tags:

C++

Null