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I am trying to learn C, for fun. I am using a Linux distro. I am trying to compile a program which uses kbhit(). I found a way to this with TurboC (http://www.sandroid.org/TurboC/#Download).

I followed the instructions but make gives me this:

gettext.c: Dans la fonction « gettextTurboC »:
gettext.c:93:13: warning: les cibles pointées dans l'affectation de « int8_t * » {alias « signed char * »} vers « uint8_t * » {alias « unsigned char * »} diffèrent dans la plage signée [-Wpointer-sign]
   TurboData = (int8_t *) dest;
             ^
In file included from TurboC.h:60,
                 from conio.h:49,
                 from gettext.c:42:
TurboC.h:250:14: error: expected « ) » before « int32_t »
 #define long int32_t
              ^~~~~~~
/usr/include/curses.h:1238:66: note: dans l'expansion de la macro « long »
 #define PAIR_NUMBER(a) (NCURSES_CAST(int,((NCURSES_CAST(unsigned long,(a)) & A_COLOR) >> NCURSES_ATTR_SHIFT)))
                                                                  ^~~~
gettext.c:124:10: note: pour correspondre à ce « ( »
  Color = PAIR_NUMBER (ch & A_COLOR);
          ^~~~~~~~~~~
gettext.c:125:23: warning: les cibles pointées dans le passage de l'argument 2 de « pair_content » diffèrent dans la plage signée [-Wpointer-sign]
  pair_content (Color, &dFore, &dBack);
                       ^~~~~~
In file included from TurboC.h:60,
                 from conio.h:49,
                 from gettext.c:42:
/usr/include/curses.h:746:28: note: « short int * » attendu mais l'argument est de type « uint16_t * » {alias « short unsigned int * »}
 extern NCURSES_EXPORT(int) pair_content (NCURSES_PAIRS_T,NCURSES_COLOR_T*,NCURSES_COLOR_T*);  /* implemented */
                            ^~~~~~~~~~~~
gettext.c:125:31: warning: les cibles pointées dans le passage de l'argument 3 de « pair_content » diffèrent dans la plage signée [-Wpointer-sign]
  pair_content (Color, &dFore, &dBack);
                               ^~~~~~
In file included from TurboC.h:60,
                 from conio.h:49,
                 from gettext.c:42:
/usr/include/curses.h:746:28: note: « short int * » attendu mais l'argument est de type « uint16_t * » {alias « short unsigned int * »}
 extern NCURSES_EXPORT(int) pair_content (NCURSES_PAIRS_T,NCURSES_COLOR_T*,NCURSES_COLOR_T*);  /* implemented */
                            ^~~~~~~~~~~~
make: *** [Makefile:126: gettext.o] Error 1

I really don't know what to do with this error:

TurboC.h:250:14: error: expected « ) » before « int32_t »
#define long int32_t

Can somebody help me?

12
  • 6
    The first thing you need to do before having your breakfast is uninstall Turbo C and make a note for yourself to never touch it again. Then you can proceed with learning C using a modern C compiler that comes with your Linux distro. Jan 13, 2019 at 11:44
  • 1
    It would be helpful if the output were in English and some sample code were available (stackoverflow.com/help/mcve). Jan 13, 2019 at 11:45
  • 1
    Yes, gcc is present in the OS. Obviously I have to give up TurboC. Now I will focus on finding a modern C compiler and how to compile. Thank you for the link about gcc.
    – Fabien
    Jan 13, 2019 at 12:06
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    @n.m. They never installed Turbo C. These are gcc error messages. You seem to be mixing up TurboC and Turbo C (which is understandable , "TurboC" was a dreadful choice of name for this project)
    – M.M
    Jan 13, 2019 at 12:31
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    @M.M Thanks, I have looked at this TurboC thing, I was not aware of it. Apparently it's a library for porting MS DOS based code to gcc based compilers. Unless one already has some MS DOS based code to port, this library is not needed. It is certainly not needed for studying C. So OP should uninstall it just the same. Jan 13, 2019 at 14:10

3 Answers 3

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Disclaimer: I am leaving the question of usefulness of studying Turbo C in our century aside.

The problem lies in the macro definition at TurboC.h:250:

#define long int32_t

This is an attempt to redefine the built-in type long through int32_t. The latter is defined in stdint.h, supplied by the compiler vendor. The definition of int32_t is such that it is ultimately mapped on a built-in signed integral type which is 32 bit long. Given that on modern mainstream architectures int is 32-bit long, a typical definition of int32_t look like this:

typedef int int32_t;

In any case, int32_t is a typedef-name.

Defining long via int32_t as a macro means that all subsequent occurrences of the token long are replaced with the token int32. This, among other consequences, breaks legitimate constructs like unsigned long: after macro expansion this construct is rendered as unsigned int32_t.

Now, combining unsigned with a typedef-name is illegal. C syntax specifies that to designate an integer type we have to use either a typedef-name or a combination of keywords such as unsigned and long, but not both at the same time.

How GCC reports this error is somewhat confusing. While processing a statement,

Color = PAIR_NUMBER (ch & A_COLOR);

it expands the function-like macro PAIR_NUMBER, which is defined in such a way that it contains a sequence of tokens unsigned and long. long is then further expanded as int32_t, which produces a sequence of tokens unsigned and int32_t. At the place of expansion the compiler does not expect a typedef-name following unsigned, as syntax forbids that.

It then presumes that this invalid combination of tokens is a result of a missing right parenthesis somewhere. This presumption is in this case wrong and leads to a confusing error message.

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  • thank you for the time you took to write tour answer
    – Fabien
    Jan 13, 2019 at 15:52
2

The "TurboC" project you are trying to use probably only ever worked for simple programs on a specific gcc version of the author's computer. The error messages suggest major, unfixable problems. I would advise not trying to use it.

Instead you could learn C in some other way that doesn't involve trying to build Turbo C source code. If you're looking for something similar then maybe search for ncurses example programs or tutorials.

Once you learn the language better you will probably be able to come back to the original source code you're looking at now and be able to port it to ncurses directly.

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  • I will look at ncurses, thank you.
    – Fabien
    Jan 13, 2019 at 15:53
1

I am trying to learn C, for fun. I am using a Linux distro.

A Linux distribution is an excellent choice to learn C. Notice that it is made of free software, whose source code you could study. You'll learn a lot by studying the source code of small free software programs written in C (e.g. those from coreutils, or a simple shell like sash, etc.).

If you want to learn C programming, start first with simple command line programs using standard streams (a program which handles directly the keyboard is something complex, not for newbies) and restrict yourself to use only the C standard library at first.

(the code in your question is not in standard C -since it uses some external library-; I don't recommend trying that at first)

Later, when you are more familiar with the C programming language, you could use some external libraries. A Linux distribution has lots of them. You may need to install development packages for them, e.g. libncurses-dev on Debian or Ubuntu for ncurses.

A very important notion in C is undefined behavior. Learn more about it, avoid it, be scared of it.

I am trying to compile a program which uses kbhit()

Notice that kbhit and <conio.h> are not in the C11 standard (see n1570...), and they are not in the C standard library, so don't use them (and you won't find any direct equivalent on Linux or POSIX).

On Linux, you might want to use ncurses. Of course, you need to spend a few days learning it and studying its documentation. You won't find a direct equivalent to kbhit. Read the NCURSES programming howto.

You may want to use some non-standard libraries (Linux has lots of them). Then read Program Library HowTo.

The terminal (and terminal emulators, and the line discipline) is a complex thing. Read The TTY demystified, termios(3), pty(7). You really want to use some library such as ncurses (or perhaps readline).

geany is not a compiler, but a source code editor. See this answer to a related question.

You probably want to use some build automation tool, such as GNU make. It will run the gcc compiler for you. So read How to invoke GCC.

Once you are familiar with C programming in general, you might want to learn more about Linux programming, so read ALP.

PS. TurboC is an ancient C compiler (not standard conforming) that you should even forget. It does not exist on Linux. GCC is a good, standard conforming, C compiler. You should use it with all warnings and debug info, i.e. compile yoursourcecode.c as gcc -Wall -Wextra -g yoursourcecode.c -o yourbinary on Linux. Read also How to debug small programs. The valgrind tool is also very useful (and available on Linux) to debug memory leaks.

When asking questions on StackOverflow, be sure to set your locale to English. We are not supposed to decipher compiler diagnostics in French.

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    Thank you for teaching me. This is exactly the answer I needed!
    – Fabien
    Jan 13, 2019 at 15:59
  • I'll study all what you gave me and will not hesitate to send you a email when It will be necessary, thank you Basile.
    – Fabien
    Jan 13, 2019 at 16:48

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