Correction, a[33]
Brian V. Smith
envbvs at epb2.lbl.gov
Sat May 27 12:55:33 AEST 1989
In article <17763 at mimsy.UUCP> chris at mimsy.UUCP (Chris Torek) writes:
[ some stuff]
>Similarly, &b[7] could legally be at the end of memory, pointing to nothing
>dereferencable; all that's required is that &b[7] can be computed and stored
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Please excuse my ignorance, but I've seen this word many times now, and it's
not in Webster's.
What does "dereferencable" mean? I could see "referencable", meaning "can
be referenced", but de-referencable?
_____________________________________
Brian V. Smith (bvsmith at lbl.gov)
Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory
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