56

I found out that the following code gets accepted by Visual C++ 2008 and GCC 4.3 compilers:

void foo()
{

}

void bar()
{
  return foo();
}

I am a bit surprised that it compiles. Is this a language feature or is it a bug in the compilers? What do the C/C++ standards say about this?

0

4 Answers 4

72

It's a language feature of C++

C++ (ISO 14882:2003) 6.6.3/3

A return statement with an expression of type “cv void” can be used only in functions with a return type of cv void; the expression is evaluated just before the function returns to its caller.

C (ISO 9899:1999) 6.8.6.4/1

A return statement with an expression shall not appear in a function whose return type is void.

1
  • 2
    Note that many compilers that can compile both C and C++ will offer the C++ rule as a non-standard extension while compiling C code, although this shouldn't be relied on if you want to be portable. Mar 13, 2017 at 20:04
51

Yes, it is valid code. This is necessary when you have template functions so that you can use uniform code. For example,

template<typename T, typename P>
T f(int x, P y)
{
  return g(x, y);
}

Now, g might be overloaded to return void when the second argument is some particular type. If "returning void" were invalid, the call to f would then break.

4
  • 1
    T can't be void, because a parameter cannot be void.
    – strager
    Aug 1, 2010 at 17:54
  • Thanks,I've realized myself a few minutes after that I've given a bad example. Fixed!
    – zvrba
    Aug 1, 2010 at 17:59
  • 3
    This feature also opens a little trap: in void positive_action(int n) { if (n<0) return; action(n); [...] }, if action returns void, then forgetting the semicolon after return will give no errors or warnings, but action now get called whe n is negative rather than when it is positive. Apr 18, 2014 at 7:13
  • Compilers can also use it as a hint that they should be doing tail call optimisation, which can be useful if f() is called frequently. Mar 13, 2017 at 20:10
5

This is valid and can be quite useful for example to create cleaner code in situations when you want to do some error handling before returning:

void ErrRet(int code, char* msg)
{
   // code logging/handling error
}
void f()
{
   if (...) return ErrRet(5, "Error Message !");
   // code continue
}
1

Valid indeed. I use it often for input validation macros:

#define ASSERT_AND_RETURN_IF_NULL(p,r) if (!p) { assert(p && "#p must not be null"); return r; }

bool func1(void* p) {
  ASSERT_AND_RETURN_IF_NULL(p, false);
  ...
}

void func2(void* p) {
  ASSERT_AND_RETURN_IF_NULL(p, void());
  ...
}

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