137

I recently had to type in a small C test program and, in the process, I made a spelling mistake in the main function by accidentally using vooid instead of void.

And yet it still worked.

Reducing it down to its smallest complete version, I ended up with:

int main (vooid) {
    return 42;
}

This does indeed compile (gcc -Wall -o myprog myprog.c) and, when run, it returns 42.

How exactly is this valid code?


Here's a transcript cut and pasted from my bash shell to show what I'm doing:

pax$ cat qq.c
int main (vooid) {
    return 42;
}

pax$ rm qq ; gcc -Wall -o qq qq.c ; ./qq

pax$ echo $?
42
4
  • By defining main with a single int parameter, you invoke Undefined Behaviour. Anything can happen :)
    – pmg
    Feb 13, 2011 at 23:40
  • 9
    Actually, I'm not sure about the UB, @pmg. ISO specifically allows for other possibilities of main from the standard two canonical ones. For portability, you should use one of those two but I don't think UB applies here.
    – paxdiablo
    Feb 14, 2011 at 0:50
  • Hmm: in a hosted environment main must have one of the 2 canonical forms (2.1.2.2). But you're right @pax, in a free-standing environment, the identifier main is in no way special: if used as a function it can be of any type and have any number of parameters of any type.
    – pmg
    Feb 14, 2011 at 19:08
  • 2
    In C99, freestanding is totally implementation defined. For hosted, section 5.1.2.2.1 states at the end "or in some other implementation-defined manner" so it requires, at a minimum, the two canonical forms but can have others as well (this would allow the UNIXy int main (int argc, char *argv[], char *envp[]); to be conforming).
    – paxdiablo
    Feb 14, 2011 at 23:27

4 Answers 4

219

It's simply using the "old-style" function-declaration syntax; you're implicitly declaring an int parameter called vooid.

2
  • 2
    This seems to be the case. If you add "vooid=42; return vooid;" to main, you also get a return value of 42.
    – Jeff Ames
    Feb 13, 2011 at 22:46
  • 43
    Aargghh, you're right. If I add -std=c99, I get qq.c:1: warning: type of 'vooid' defaults to 'int'.
    – paxdiablo
    Feb 13, 2011 at 22:48
70

It's valid code, because myprog.c contains:

int main (vooid) // vooid is of type int, allowed, and an alias for argc
{     
  return 42; // The answer to the Ultimate Question
} 

vooid contains one plus the number of arguments passed (i.e., argc). So, in effect all you've done is to rename argc to vooid.

2
  • 12
    If you do "return vooid;" instead, it does indeed give 1 + num. of args.
    – Jeff Ames
    Feb 13, 2011 at 22:48
  • 6
    @Jeff, the name of the program is counted as an arguement, hence the+1 Feb 14, 2011 at 2:21
23

In C, the default type for a function argument is int. So, your program is treating the word vooid as int main(int vooid), which is perfectly valid code.

20

It is only gcc -std=c89 -Wall -o qq qq.c and gcc -std=gnu89 -Wall -o qq qq.c don't emit a warning. All the other standards emit a warning about implicit type int for vooid.

int main(chart) behaves the same way as does int main (vooid).

return vooid; returns the number of command line arguments.

I tested with gcc 4.4.5 on Debian testing system.

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