#define NULL ( (void *) 0)

and

#define NULL 0

are both valid. If you need to implement your own macro for null pointer, the same rule applies.

C11(ISO/IEC 9899:201x) Β§6.3.2.3 Pointers Section 3

An integer constant expression with the value 0, or such an expression cast to type void *, is called a null pointer constant

Answer from Yu Hao on Stack Overflow
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GeeksforGeeks
geeksforgeeks.org β€Ί c language β€Ί null-pointer-in-c
NULL Pointer in C - GeeksforGeeks
January 10, 2025 - β€œAn integer constant expression with the value 0, or such an expression cast to type void *, is called a null pointer constant. If a null pointer constant is converted to a pointer type, the resulting pointer, called a null pointer, is guaranteed ...
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C NULL
You can compare a pointer to NULL to check if it is safe to use. Many C functions return NULL when something goes wrong. For example, fopen() returns NULL if a file cannot be opened, and malloc() returns NULL if memory allocation fails.
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Why is there a NULL in the C language? - Stack Overflow
NULL is used to make it clear it is a pointer type. Ideally, the C implementation would define NULL as ((void *) 0) or something equivalent, and programmers would always use NULL when they want a null pointer constant. If this is done, then, when a programmer has, for example, an int *x and ... More on stackoverflow.com
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NULL Define in c & c++ differs?! | Handmade Network
Well, we don't know without doing a google search or looking up some kind of specification. Suddenly nullptr becomes a little more abstracted when nullptr is used. ... Randy Gaul For example I have my own opinion: C defining NULL as ((void*)0) was great because anyone can go lookup the exact ... More on hero.handmade.network
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c - What is the difference between NULL, '\0' and 0? - Stack Overflow
In all cases, it is still an integer constant with the value 0, it is just described in different ways. If a pointer is being compared to the constant literal 0, then this is a check to see if the pointer is a null pointer. This 0 is then referred to as a null pointer constant. The C standard defines ... More on stackoverflow.com
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C library - NULL Macro
Following is the C library syntax of the NULL Macro. #define NULL ((char *)0) or, #define NULL 0L or #define NULL 0 Β· This is not a function. So, it doesn't accept any parameter.
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April 27, 2019 - The C and C++ programming, a pointer is a variable that holds a memory location. The null pointer is a pointer that intentionally points to nothing. If you don't have an address to assign to a pointer, you can use null.
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Null Pointer In C | A Detailed Explanation With Examples
May 3, 2024 - You can initialize a null pointer in C, simply by assigning the special value NULL to a pointer variable. NULL is a macro defined in the standard C libraries, typically as ((void *)0), although its exact definition can vary across implementations.
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NULL Pointer in C
This is how you would declare and initialize a NULL pointer βˆ’ ... #include <stdio.h> int main() { int *p= NULL;//initialize the pointer as null. printf("The value of pointer is %u",p); return 0; } When you run this code, it will produce the ...
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Top answer
1 of 5
7

Actually, you can use a literal 0 anyplace you would use NULL.

Section 6.3.2.3p3 of the C standard states:

An integer constant expression with the value 0, or such an expression cast to type void *, is called a null pointer constant. If a null pointer constant is converted to a pointer type, the resulting pointer, called a null pointer, is guaranteed to compare unequal to a pointer to any object or function.

And section 7.19p3 states:

The macros are:

CopyNULL

which expands to an implementation-defined null pointer constant

So 0 qualifies as a null pointer constant, as does (void *)0 and NULL. The use of NULL is preferred however as it makes it more evident to the reader that a null pointer is being used and not the integer value 0.

2 of 5
5

NULL is used to make it clear it is a pointer type.

Ideally, the C implementation would define NULL as ((void *) 0) or something equivalent, and programmers would always use NULL when they want a null pointer constant.

If this is done, then, when a programmer has, for example, an int *x and accidentally writes *x = NULL;, then the compiler can recognize that a mistake has been made, because the left side of = has type int, and the right side has type void *, and this is not a proper combination for assignment.

In contrast, if the programmer accidentally writes *x = 0; instead of x = 0;, then the compiler cannot recognize this mistake, because the left side has type int, and the right side has type int, and that is a valid combination.

Thus, when NULL is defined well and is used, mistakes are detected earlier.

In particular answer to your question β€œIs there a context in which just plain literal 0 would not work exactly the same?”:

  • In correct code, NULL and 0 may be used interchangeably as null pointer constants.
  • 0 will function as an integer (non-pointer) constant, but NULL might not, depending on how the C implementation defines it.
  • For the purpose of detecting errors, NULL and 0 do not work exactly the same; using NULL with a good definition serves to help detect some mistakes that using 0 does not.

The C standard allows 0 to be used for null pointer constants for historic reasons. However, this is not beneficial except for allowing previously written code to compile in compilers using current C standards. New code should avoid using 0 as a null pointer constant.

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NULL - cppreference.com
January 12, 2024 - POSIX requires NULL to be defined as an integer constant expression with the value 0 cast to void*.
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September 4, 2023 - We can handle errors in pointer-related code this way, for example, only dereference a pointer variable if it is not NULL. When we don't want to pass a valid memory address to a function argument, we can pass a null pointer. generally, we can say that a null pointer is a pointer that does not point to any object. The syntax of a null pointer can be defined ...
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NULL Define in c & c++ differs?! | Handmade Network
Well, we don't know without doing a google search or looking up some kind of specification. Suddenly nullptr becomes a little more abstracted when nullptr is used. ... Randy Gaul For example I have my own opinion: C defining NULL as ((void*)0) was great because anyone can go lookup the exact definition of what NULL is and see the definition in terms of elementary expressions, integers and type-casting.
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NULL is not available by default: you need to include stdio.h to use it (or, if you prefer, stddef.h): #include <stdio.h> int main(void) { int * p_some_variable = NULL; } ... hello.c:3:26: error: use of undeclared identifier 'NULL' int * ...
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December 31, 2025 - NULL: A macro that represents a null pointer, usually defined as ((void*)0). β€˜\0’: The null character used to end strings. It has an ASCII value of 0. Sanfoundry Global Education & Learning Series – 1000 C Tutorials.
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Using Null Pointer in C Programming
#include <stdio.h> #include <string.h> #define MAX_NAMES 100 int search(char *ptr[], char* name); int main(void) { char *names[MAX_NAMES]; char name[50]; int count = 0; printf("Enter names (press enter to stop):\n"); // get names from user input while(1) { scanf("%s", name); if(strcmp(name, "") == 0) { break; } names[count] = (char*) malloc(strlen(name)+1); strcpy(names[count], name); count++; } names[count] = NULL; // mark end of array with null pointer // search for names while(1) { printf("Enter name to search for (press enter to stop):\n"); scanf("%s", name); if(strcmp(name, "") == 0) { br
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Null Pointers (GNU C Language Manual)
Next: Dereferencing Null or Invalid Pointers, Previous: Dereferencing Pointers, Up: Pointers [Contents][Index] A pointer value can be null, which means it does not point to any object. The cleanest way to get a null pointer is by writing NULL, a standard macro defined in stddef.h.
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1 of 11
445

Note: This answer applies to the C language, not C++.


Null Pointers

The integer constant literal 0 has different meanings depending upon the context in which it's used. In all cases, it is still an integer constant with the value 0, it is just described in different ways.

If a pointer is being compared to the constant literal 0, then this is a check to see if the pointer is a null pointer. This 0 is then referred to as a null pointer constant. The C standard defines that 0 cast to the type void * is both a null pointer and a null pointer constant.

Additionally, to help readability, the macro NULL is provided in the header file stddef.h. Depending upon your compiler it might be possible to #undef NULL and redefine it to something wacky.

Therefore, here are some valid ways to check for a null pointer:

if (pointer == NULL)

NULL is defined to compare equal to a null pointer. It is implementation defined what the actual definition of NULL is, as long as it is a valid null pointer constant.

if (pointer == 0)

0 is another representation of the null pointer constant.

if (!pointer)

This if statement implicitly checks "is not 0", so we reverse that to mean "is 0".

The following are INVALID ways to check for a null pointer:

int mynull = 0;
<some code>
if (pointer == mynull)

To the compiler this is not a check for a null pointer, but an equality check on two variables. This might work if mynull never changes in the code and the compiler optimizations constant fold the 0 into the if statement, but this is not guaranteed and the compiler has to produce at least one diagnostic message (warning or error) according to the C Standard.

Note that the value of a null pointer in the C language does not matter on the underlying architecture. If the underlying architecture has a null pointer value defined as address 0xDEADBEEF, then it is up to the compiler to sort this mess out.

As such, even on this funny architecture, the following ways are still valid ways to check for a null pointer:

if (!pointer)
if (pointer == NULL)
if (pointer == 0)

The following are INVALID ways to check for a null pointer:

#define MYNULL (void *) 0xDEADBEEF
if (pointer == MYNULL)
if (pointer == 0xDEADBEEF)

as these are seen by a compiler as normal comparisons.

Null Characters

'\0' is defined to be a null character - that is a character with all bits set to zero. '\0' is (like all character literals) an integer constant, in this case with the value zero. So '\0' is completely equivalent to an unadorned 0 integer constant - the only difference is in the intent that it conveys to a human reader ("I'm using this as a null character.").

'\0' has nothing to do with pointers. However, you may see something similar to this code:

if (!*char_pointer)

checks if the char pointer is pointing at a null character.

if (*char_pointer)

checks if the char pointer is pointing at a non-null character.

Don't get these confused with null pointers. Just because the bit representation is the same, and this allows for some convenient cross over cases, they are not really the same thing.

References

See Question 5.3 of the comp.lang.c FAQ for more. See this pdf for the C standard. Check out sections 6.3.2.3 Pointers, paragraph 3.

2 of 11
45

It appears that a number of people misunderstand what the differences between NULL, '\0' and 0 are. So, to explain, and in attempt to avoid repeating things said earlier:

A constant expression of type int with the value 0, or an expression of this type, cast to type void * is a null pointer constant, which if converted to a pointer becomes a null pointer. It is guaranteed by the standard to compare unequal to any pointer to any object or function.

NULL is a macro, defined in as a null pointer constant.

\0 is a construction used to represent the null character, used to terminate a string.

A null character is a byte which has all its bits set to 0.

Top answer
1 of 6
30

In C and C++, pointers are inherently unsafe, that is, when you dereference a pointer, it is your own responsibility to make sure it points somewhere valid; this is part of what "manual memory management" is about (as opposed to the automatic memory management schemes implemented in languages like Java, PHP, or the .NET runtime, which won't allow you to create invalid references without considerable effort).

A common solution that catches many errors is to set all pointers that don't point to anything as NULL (or, in correct C++, 0), and checking for that before accessing the pointer. Specifically, it is common practice to initialize all pointers to NULL (unless you already have something to point them at when you declare them), and set them to NULL when you delete or free() them (unless they go out of scope immediately after that). Example (in C, but also valid C++):

void fill_foo(int* foo) {
    *foo = 23; // this will crash and burn if foo is NULL
}

A better version:

void fill_foo(int* foo) {
    if (!foo) { // this is the NULL check
        printf("This is wrong\n");
        return;
    }
    *foo = 23;
}

Without the null check, passing a NULL pointer into this function will cause a segfault, and there is nothing you can do - the OS will simply kill your process and maybe core-dump or pop up a crash report dialog. With the null check in place, you can perform proper error handling and recover gracefully - correct the problem yourself, abort the current operation, write a log entry, notify the user, whatever is appropriate.

2 of 6
8

The other answers pretty much covered your exact question. A null check is made to be sure that the pointer you received actually points to a valid instance of a type (objects, primitives, etc).

I'm going to add my own piece of advice here, though. Avoid null checks. :) Null checks (and other forms of Defensive Programming) clutter code up, and actually make it more error prone than other error-handling techniques.

My favorite technique when it comes to object pointers is to use the Null Object pattern. That means returning a (pointer - or even better, reference to an) empty array or list instead of null, or returning an empty string ("") instead of null, or even the string "0" (or something equivalent to "nothing" in the context) where you expect it to be parsed to an integer.

As a bonus, here's a little something you might not have known about the null pointer, which was (first formally) implemented by C.A.R. Hoare for the Algol W language in 1965.

I call it my billion-dollar mistake. It was the invention of the null reference in 1965. At that time, I was designing the first comprehensive type system for references in an object oriented language (ALGOL W). My goal was to ensure that all use of references should be absolutely safe, with checking performed automatically by the compiler. But I couldn't resist the temptation to put in a null reference, simply because it was so easy to implement. This has led to innumerable errors, vulnerabilities, and system crashes, which have probably caused a billion dollars of pain and damage in the last forty years.

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Difference between NULL pointer, Null character ('\0') and '0' in C with Examples - GeeksforGeeks
July 15, 2025 - The macro NULL is provided in the header file "stddef.h". Below are the ways to check for a NULL pointer: NULL is defined to compare equal to a null pointer as: ... if(!pointer) Null Characters('\0'): '\0' is defined to be a null character.