| title |
void (C++) | Microsoft Docs |
| ms.custom |
|
| ms.date |
11/04/2016 |
| ms.reviewer |
|
| ms.suite |
|
| ms.technology |
|
| ms.tgt_pltfrm |
|
| ms.topic |
language-reference |
| f1_keywords |
|
| dev_langs |
|
| helpviewer_keywords |
void keyword [C++] |
functions [C++], void |
pointers, void |
|
| ms.assetid |
d203edba-38e6-4056-8b89-011437351057 |
| caps.latest.revision |
9 |
| author |
mikeblome |
| ms.author |
mblome |
| manager |
ghogen |
| translation.priority.ht |
cs-cz |
de-de |
es-es |
fr-fr |
it-it |
ja-jp |
ko-kr |
pl-pl |
pt-br |
ru-ru |
tr-tr |
zh-cn |
zh-tw |
|
When used as a function return type, the void keyword specifies that the function does not return a value. When used for a function's parameter list, void specifies that the function takes no parameters. When used in the declaration of a pointer, void specifies that the pointer is "universal."
If a pointer's type is void *, the pointer can point to any variable that is not declared with the const or volatile keyword. A void pointer cannot be dereferenced unless it is cast to another type. A void pointer can be converted into any other type of data pointer.
A void pointer can point to a function, but not to a class member in C++.
You cannot declare a variable of type void.
// void.cpp
void vobject; // C2182
void *pv; // okay
int *pint; int i;
int main() {
pv = &i;
// Cast optional in C required in C++
pint = (int *)pv;
}
Keywords
Fundamental Types