As I know it, objects in C have 3 types of linkages: 1)external 2)internal and 3)none, and that objects declared at block scope, as within a function body, have no linkage unless preceded with the keyword "extern" or "static".
But why then the function declaration below is able to link to the definition below the main() function even though I've not used "extern" during declaration? Please explain this as it is throwing my whole understanding of the topic upside down. Thank you.
#include<stdio.h>
int main()
{
int foo(); //working even though I've not used "extern"
printf("%d",foo());
}
int foo()
{
return 8;
}
RESULT OF ABOVE PROGRAM: 8
main()
andmain()
already knows what is prototype of that function.main
, so nothing is known about it until it's declared inmain