There is difference between constant pointer and pointer to constant. Constant pointer is a pointer (a number - memory address) that cannot be changed - it always point to the same object given via initialization:
int * const const_pointer = &some_int_var; // will be always pointing to this var
const_pointer = &some_other_var; // illegal - cannot change the pointer
*const_pointer = 2; // legal, the pointer is a pointer to non-const
Pointer to constant is a pointer whose pointed value cannot be changed:
const int * pointer_to_const = &some_int_var; // doesn't have to be always pointing to this var
pointer = &some_other_var; // legal, it's not a constant pointer and we can change it
*pointer = 2; // illegal, pointed value cannot be changed
You can always assign constant to variable i.e. const pointer to non-const pointer (a). You can cast pointer to non-const to a pointer to const (b). But you cannot cast pointer to const to a pointer to non-const (c):
int * pointer;
int * const const_pointer = &var;
const int * pointer_to_const;
/* a */
pointer = const_pointer; // OK, no cast (same type)
/* b */
pointer_to_const = pointer; // OK, casting 'int*' to 'const int*'
/* c */
pointer = pointer_to_const; // Illegal, casting 'const int*' to 'int*'
[EDIT] Below, this is not standard c++. However, this is common.[/EDIT]
String literal
"Hello"
is converted to constant pointer to const (const char * const
):
char *pointer = "Hello"; // Illegal, cannot cast 'const char*' to 'char*'
char * const const_pointer = "Hello"; // Illegal, cannot cast 'const char*' to 'char*'
const char * pointer_to_const = "Hello"; // OK, we can assign a constant to a variable of the same type (and the type is 'const char*')
"Hello" = pointer_to_const; // Illegal cannot re-assign a constant
In above examples the second is your case. You tried to initialize pointer-to-non-const with a pointer-to-const when passing string literal as argument of your function. No matter if these pointers are constants or not, it's matter what do they point to.
Summary:
1) If you cast a pointer of some type to a pointer of another type, you cannot cast pointer-to-const to pointer-to-non-const.
2) If you have constant pointer, the same rules applies as to other constants - you can assign a constant to a variable but you cannot assign a variable to a constant (except initializing it).
// EDIT
As GMan pointed out, the C++98 standard (§4.2/2) allows to implicitly cast string literals (which are constant char arrays) to a non-const char pointer. This is because of backward compatibility (in C language there are no constants).
Of course such a conversion can lead to mistakes and compilers will violate the rule and show an error. However, GCC in compatibility mode shows only a warning.