vote up 8 vote down star
1

(I'm using Visual C++ 2008) I've always heard that main() is required to return an integer, but here I didn't put in return 0; and and it compiled with 0 errors and 0 warnings! In the debug window it says the program has exited with code 0. If this function is named anything other than main(), the compiler complains saying 'blah' must return a value. Sticking a return; also causes the error to appear. But leaving it out completely, it compiles just fine.

#include <iostream>
using namespace std;

int main()
{
    cout << "Hey look I'm supposed to return an int but I'm not gonna!\n";
}

Could this be a bug in VC++?

flag

4 Answers

vote up 29 vote down check

3.6.1 Main function

....

2 An implementation shall not predefine the main function. This function shall not be overloaded. It shall have a return type of type int, but otherwise its type is implementation-defined. All implementations shall allow both of the following definitions of main:

int main() { /* ... */ }

and

int main(int argc, char* argv[]) { /* ... */ }

.... and it continues to add ...

5 A return statement in main has the effect of leaving the main function (destroying any objects with automatic storage duration) and calling exit with the return value as the argument. If control reaches the end of main without encountering a return statement, the effect is that of executing return 0;

attempting to find an online copy of the C++ standard so I could quote this passage I found a blog post that quotes all the right bits better than I could.

link|flag
g++ will throw an error at you by default for doing this. most other compilers do "return 0" instead – wakingrufus Apr 29 at 1:06
Older versions of GCC actually returned garbage in some instances if you didn't have a return statement in main(). – Mark Bessey Jul 17 at 20:23
@wakingrufus, what version of g++ are you using? I'm getting the correct behavior as described by sparkes. – Kevin Jul 17 at 20:34
vote up 3 vote down

I'm pretty sure VC++ just inserts a return 0 if you don't include one in main functions. The same thing can happen with functions too, but in those cases at least you'll get a warning.

link|flag
vote up 7 vote down

This is part of the C++ language standard. An implicit return 0 is generated for you if there's no explicit return statement in main.

link|flag
vote up -9 vote down

Microsoft has always had it's own implementations of things. That's the way they roll. If you were to use the GNU C++ library instead, I'm sure that would trigger an error. I haven't done C++ for quite some time now, but I'm sure Dev-C++ used to trigger an error for these sort of things.

link|flag
Which says more about Dev-C++ than MSVC. This is actually correct behavior. – jalf Feb 15 at 21:39
Also, the GNU C++ compiler handles this correctly (that is, it compiles just fine). – Kevin Jul 17 at 20:29

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.