You may pass variables to functions either by address or by value. If you pass a variable by address, then both functions will see the changed value of the variable
You may pass variables to functions either by address or by value. If you pass a variable by address, then both functions will see the changed value of the variable (if the value changes). If you pass a variable by value, you are really passing a copy of the variable, and the calling function will not see the changed value of the variable (if the called function changes its value). You pass a variable by prepending the variable name with an ampersand (&). The receiving function (in this case, do_fun()), prepends the variable name with an asterisk (*). This tells the receiving function that it’s receiving the variable’s address, not a copy of the variable. Notice that the new value of the variable amt is visible in the do_fun() function and in main(). Here is the code: And here is the output: Now, you enter the code, and run it. (No flowchart this time) Upload your .c file and a screenshot of your code output saved in a Word document