I found the following declaration code in the very early sources of C compiler
main(argc, argv)
int argv[]; {
return 0;
}
I tried to run it on ideone.com compiling it in "C" mode with gcc-4.7.2 and it compiles fine and even runs successfully
result: Success time: 0s memory: 1828 kB returned value: 0
Now I'm aware that there was a pre-standard way of declaring function parameters this way:
int funct(crc, buf, len)
int crc;
register char* buf;
int len;
{
//function implementation
}
but in the latter style it's quite clear - the parameters are first just listed, then declared as if they were a kind of local variables and I see all the parameters declared and the return type.
Back to the first code
main(argc, argv)
int argv[]; {
return 0;
}
in the former code there're two parameters listed and only one declared and it looks like argv
has type array of int
.
How is it being treated by the compiler?