Im compliling C code.
Say i have header file, A.h which contains an enum. I include this file in 2 c files - B.c and C.c
B.c:
#include A.h
//....other code...
C.c
#include A.h
//....other code...
When A.h contains an enum:
A.h
#ifndef A_H
#define A_H
enum my_enum {
//...enum content...
} my_enum;
//...other code...
#endif
when defined like this, i get a 'symbol "my_enum" multiply defined' error from the compiler, which is understandable- since i defined the enum in the header file.
However, this does not happen when i typedef the enum-
A.h
#ifndef A_H
#define A_H
typedef enum my_enum {
//...enum content...
} my_enum;
//...other code...
#endif
This of course happens regardless of what the code is in the .c files (other than including A.h)
What is the reasoning behind this? Why is it not a multiple definition when i typedef the enum?