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The following obfuscated C code prints the words to the "12 days of Xmas".

I was trying to puzzle out how it works. I'm basically completely lost. What is the significance of the three untyped arguments to main in the initial call, the series of characters after the first return, the negative numeric arguments to the calls to main? Eek!

I'm mostly doing this thinking maybe I'll learn some interesting corners of the C language, so replies in that vein are the most welcome.

#include <stdio.h>
main(t,_,a)char *a;{return!0<t?t<3?main(-79,-13,a+main(-87,1-_,
main(-86,0,a+1)+a)):1,t<_?main(t+1,_,a):3,main(-94,-27+t,a)&&t==2?_<13?
main(2,_+1,"%s %d %d\n"):9:16:t<0?t<-72?main(_,t,
"@n'+,#'/*{}w+/w#cdnr/+,{}r/*de}+,/*{*+,/w{%+,/w#q#n+,/#{l,+,/n{n+,/+#n+,/#\
;#q#n+,/+k#;*+,/'r :'d*'3,}{w+K w'K:'+}e#';dq#'l \
q#'+d'K#!/+k#;q#'r}eKK#}w'r}eKK{nl]'/#;#q#n'){)#}w'){){nl]'/+#n';d}rw' i;# \
){nl]!/n{n#'; r{#w'r nc{nl]'/#{l,+'K {rw' iK{;[{nl]'/w#q#n'wk nw' \
iwk{KK{nl]!/w{%'l##w#' i; :{nl]'/*{q#'ld;r'}{nlwb!/*de}'c \
;;{nl'-{}rw]'/+,}##'*}#nc,',#nw]'/+kd'+e}+;#'rdq#w! nr'/ ') }+}{rl#'{n' ')# \
}'+}##(!!/")
:t<-50?_==*a?putchar(31[a]):main(-65,_,a+1):main((*a=='/')+t,_,a+1)
  :0<t?main(2,2,"%s"):*a=='/'||main(0,main(-61,*a,
"!ek;dc i@bK'(q)-[w]*%n+r3#l,{}:\nuwloca-O;m .vpbks,fxntdCeghiry"),a+1);}
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Is this from the IOCCC? – Zifre Apr 7 at 23:05
Can't remember where I found it. Sorry. – Leonard Apr 7 at 23:07
Yes, it's from the ioccc: ioccc.org/1988/phillipps.c – Daniel LeCheminant Apr 7 at 23:13

3 Answers

vote up 9 vote down check

Someone's already gone and reversed this: http://research.microsoft.com/en-us/um/people/tball/papers/xmasgift/. Just read through that. It'll explain how it all works.

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A couple of chars from that opening line, web search, Wikipedia, and I ended up at the same article. +1 – gbarry Apr 7 at 23:15
@gbarry: Same approach led me to udel.edu/~mm/xmas – Daniel LeCheminant Apr 7 at 23:16
vote up 1 vote down

Some Unix systems do not only pass the argument count and the arguments to main, but also a vector to the environment (see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Main_function_(programming)). I am pretty sure that is what this obfuscated example did expect.

I don't think that you can learn to much from such obfuscated code. It was probably a contestant to the obfuscated c contest.

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vote up 0 vote down

I'm not going to attempt to figure this out, but try reformatting the code to look somewhat normal. That might help. I believe the long string is essentially a compressed form of the song.

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