A pointer to a pointer is a form of chain of pointers. Normally, a pointer contains the address of a variable. When we define a pointer to a pointer, the first pointer contains the address of the second pointer, which points to the location that contains the actual value as shown below.
A variable that is a pointer to a pointer must be declared as such. This is done by placing an additional asterisk in front of its name. For example, the following statement declares a pointer to a pointer of type int −
var ptr **int;
When a target value is indirectly pointed to by a pointer to a pointer, accessing that value requires that the asterisk operator be applied twice, as is shown in the following example −
package main import "fmt" func main() { var a int var ptr *int var pptr **int a = 3000 /* take the address of var */ ptr = &a /* take the address of ptr using address of operator & */ pptr = &ptr /* take the value using pptr */ fmt.Printf("Value of a = %d\n", a ) fmt.Printf("Value available at *ptr = %d\n", *ptr ) fmt.Printf("Value available at **pptr = %d\n", **pptr) }
When the above code is compiled and executed, it produces the following result −
Value of var = 3000 Value available at *ptr = 3000 Value available at **pptr = 3000
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