You should read more about C programming.
And you should enable all warnings and debugging when compiling. With GCC, this means gcc -Wall -Wextra -g
(on Linux at least).
When compiling with
gcc -Wall -Wextra -g john.c -o john
I am getting the following warnings:
john.c: In function ‘main’:
john.c:4:5: warning: implicit declaration of function ‘printf’ [-Wimplicit-function-declaration]
john.c:4:5: warning: incompatible implicit declaration of built-in function ‘printf’ [enabled by default]
john.c:4:5: warning: format ‘%d’ expects a matching ‘int’ argument [-Wformat]
john.c:3:9: warning: unused variable ‘myInt’ [-Wunused-variable]
So the correction is simple:
/* file john.c */
#include <stdio.h>
int main(void)
{
int myInt = 5;
printf("myInt = %d\n", myInt);
return 0;
}
which gets compiled without warnings.
Notice the \n
at the end of printf
format string. It is important.
Always enable all the warnings the compiler can give you and trust the compiler, so correct your code till no warnings is given.
And learn to use the debugger (e.g. gdb
on Linux).
The behavior you observed is undefined behavior; anything could happen with a standard conforming implementation of C (even an explosion).
Happy hacking.
printf()
call and ask yourself, how does it know which value you want to print?int printf(const char *fmt, ...);
printf
to printmyInt
, how is it going to know what number you expect it to print? If you had twoint
s in your program, which one did you mean to print?