Most applications that don't fall through enter some kind of event processing loop that allows for event-driven programming.
Under Win32 development, for instance, you'd write your WinMain function to continually handle new messages until it receives the WM_QUIT message telling the application to finish. This code typically takes the following form:
// ...meanwhile, somewhere inside WinMain()
MSG msg;
while (GetMessage(&msg, NULL, 0, 0))
{
TranslateMessage(&msg);
DispatchMessage(&msg);
}
If you are writing a game using SDL, you would loop on SDL events until deciding to exit, such as when you detect that the user has hit the Esc key. Some code to do that might resemble the following:
bool done = false;
while (!done)
{
SDL_Event event;
while (SDL_PollEvent(&event))
{
switch (event.type)
{
case SDL_QUIT:
done = true;
break;
case SDL_KEYDOWN:
if (event.key.keysym.sym == SDLK_ESCAPE)
{
done = true;
}
break;
}
}
}
You may also want to read about Unix Daemons and Windows Services.
