2

Greetings to all the expert again , and again I stumble across a few questions.

The Story :

I read a book mentions that a sequence point which is ; is a point where all the side effect before it should be evaluated before it advanced to the next statement.In order to make the context of my question clean , I will write a simple code.

The Code :

while (guess++ < 10)
{
   printf("%d \n" , guests);

My Thinking and the Question:

1.)From the above code, the while statement test condition guess++ < 10 is a full expression.So in my mindset it is not a statement because it doesn't end with a ;.

2.)Since a postfix increment operator is used , therefore the guess value evaluated before it is incremented.

3.)The book mention that the increment operation is carry out right after the guess variable is used for the relational operation , then only the printf() function would carry out its duty.

4.)My question is that , since the test condition doesn't end with a ; , therefore it's not a statement . But why the increment operation implemented before printf() function is called , but not after the print() function only it is being incremented??

5.)Maybe this is a side question , the book mention that while is a structured statement , but why didn't I see a trailing ; is append on it while(testcondition);.

6.)It might sounds like a silly question , but sometime when I read some source code written by others , I will saw some of them place the open braces { of while loop on the same line with the while() , which causes it to be like that while(testcondition){ . Is this a convention or is there any special reason for doing this??



Thanks for spending time reading my problems , your help is much appreciated.

1 Answer 1

3

Answering question 1: The code between the brackets of a while loop is actually a full expression. From wikipedia:

This category includes expression statements (such as the assignment a=b;), return statements, the controlling expressions of if, switch, while, or do-while statements, and all three expressions in a for statement.

A good description of a full expression can be found in the C faq:

full expression The complete expression that forms an expression statement, or one of the controlling expressions of an if, switch, while, for, or do/while statement, or the expression in an initializer or a return statement. A full expression is not part of a larger expression. (See ANSI Sec. 3.6 or ISO Sec. 6.6.)

It's important to note that a full expression has nothing to do with a statement or the semi-colon token.

So lets dig into this a little bit. Fixing up your code snippit I came up with this:

#include <stdio.h>
int main(void)
{
    unsigned guess = 0;
    while (guess++ < 10)
    {
       printf("%d " , guess);
    }
    return 0;
}

Which produces this output:

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10

So that means that the evaluation would be equivalent to this code:

while (guess < 10)
{
    guess++;
    printf("%d " , guess);
}

The answer to question 5 can be found in this stackoverflow question: In C/C++ why does the do while(expression); need a semi colon?

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

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