apply the char* type to both? (That is, why didn't they design it that way?)
I assume there was some reason originally, but it's made everything a bit more confusing ever since for a lot of people. :/
Edit: Apparently it's so declaration mirrors use. Not a good enough reason IMO. But plenty of languages have warts and bad choices that get brought forth. I'm a Perl dev, so I speak from experience (even if I think it's not nearly as bad as most people make out).
In the olden days of C, pointers were not considered types on their own (you cannot have just a pointer, a pointer must point ‘to’ something, grammatically speaking). The type of the object of that declaration is a char. So it’s not really read as ‘I’m declaring a char-pointer called a’, it’s more along the lines of ‘I’m declaring an unnamed char, which will be accessed when one dereferences a’. Hence the * for dereferencing.
I assume there was some reason originally, but it's made everything a bit more confusing ever since for a lot of people. :/
Edit: Apparently it's so declaration mirrors use. Not a good enough reason IMO. But plenty of languages have warts and bad choices that get brought forth. I'm a Perl dev, so I speak from experience (even if I think it's not nearly as bad as most people make out).