#include <stdio.h>
int main()
{
int a;
printf("%d\n",a);
}
The statement in the above example: int a;
— is it a declaration or definition? If it is a declaration, the printf()
statement should give an error, but it prints a garbage value. So we cannot call it a declaration. But as per the syntax it is a declaration. So what is the difference in this case?
a
were only declared, not defined, theprintf()
statement would compile — a declaration makes the variable or function available for use. If the variable were only declared and not defined, then the code would not link (and hence would not run) until the code was modified to include a definition of the declared variable. For example,int main(void) { extern int a; printf("%d\n", a); return 0; } int a = 57;
shows a declaration and a subsequent definition.return 0
just before}
or you might encounter a warning