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.