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Complying with standard C

Types for lvalues

const and volatile are part of an identifier's type, not its storage class. However, they are peculiar in that they are often removed from the top-most part of the type. This occurs when an object's value is fetched in the evaluation of an expression -- exactly at the point when an lvalue becomes an rvalue. (These terms arise from the prototypical assignment ``"L=R"''; in which the left side must still refer directly to an object (an lvalue) and the right side need only be a value (an rvalue).) Therefore, only expressions that are lvalues can be qualified by const or volatile or both.


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