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I am trying to write a function that accepts an array as a parameter. However, the C compiler (lcc) is issuing a warning (i.e. my file still compiles) that ".\tetris.c:179: warning: declaration of `clear_array' does not match previous declaration at .\tetris.c:172".

Here is the portion of my code involving the function and a call to that function that's raising the warning:

void remove_filled_rows ()
{
    int row;
    for (row = 0; row < NROWS; row++) {
        // [snip] 
        if (col == NCOLS) {
            clear_array (cells[row]);    // line 172
        }
    }

}

/* Helper method that clears a row */
void clear_array (lc4uint row_array[]) {    // line 179
    int col;
    for (col = 0; col < NCOLS; col++) {
        row_array[col] = 0;
    }
}

My array is declared as follows:

lc4uint cells[NROWS][NCOLS];

where NROWS and NCOLS are integer constants, and lc4uint is simply a typedef to unsigned int.

2 Answers 2

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The declaration has to come before the access. Either move clear_array to before you call it or add a prototype for the clear_array function prior to the call. You should have gotten an error/warning about this on any decent compiler.

The give away -- line 172 wasn't supposed to be the declaration, line 179 was. But the error said 172 was the declaration.

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  • @GiantMarshmallow gcc's message may be a bit more helpful, it speaks of the previous implicit declaration. By using it before the declaration, you implicitly declare it (with a return type of int). Nov 12, 2011 at 12:31
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lc4uint cells[NROWS][NCOLS]; // == lc4uint cells[NROWS*NCOLS] 

a declaration like this generates a 1 dimensional array in memory (although you can access it with two indices) which you can only refer in function declarations as:

fun(lc4uint cells[][NCOLS]);

because the type of cells is

lc4uint *

so in clear_array (cells[row]); cells[row] is one element and of type lc4uint hence no matching types of the function declarations. Since no declaration was given up to that point the compiler assumes now: clear_array(lc4uint) whereas you were interested in clear_array(lc4uint *)

You must change your array declaration to something like

lc4uint **cells = (lc4uint**) calloc(NROWS, sizeof(lc4uint*));
lc4uint *tmp = (lc4uint *) calloc(NROWS*NCOLS, sizeof(lc4uint))
for(int i = 0; i < NROWS; i++) cells[i] = &(tmp[i*NCOLS])

otherwise cells[row] does not return a pointer to the correct row.

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