1

Code :

foo()
{
}
int main()
{
   int a=20;
   a = foo(20);
   printf("\n\n\t A : %d",a); // will print zero.
}

Question :

  1. You may notice that there is no return type for foo(). And it is considered as 'int', Why? Why this 'Implicit int' rule? Why the designers of C loved 'int' so much?

  2. foo() doesn't have parameter declaration, it says that it can accept variable number of arguments. So where does passed arguments go? e.g. foo(20) where did 20 go?

  3. in above example printf prints zero, why?


Now, consider :

foo()
{
}
int main()
{
   int a=20;
   a = foo(a);
   printf("\n\n\t A : %d",a); // It'll print 20. 
}
  • Now printf prints 20 why not 0 like earlier?
1
  • 1
    Turn up your compiler warnings. Mar 10, 2013 at 20:57

1 Answer 1

2
  1. This is a historical thing from the original C specification as I understand it. It's still in the spec that if you don't state a return type then it is int. That doesn't mean you should take advantage of it. That's bad style in my books.

  2. Read this: Is it better to use C void arguments "void foo(void)" or not "void foo()"?

  3. What you are observing is undefined behaviour, which is what you get when you use the return value for a function that doesn't return anything.

3
  • @VishalD You need to learn how to turn the warnings on. If you are using GCC or Clang, -Wall. Mar 10, 2013 at 20:58
  • 1
    Re 2: What happens during the execution is that that main pushes 20 on the stack as an int argument, then foo does not use it, and after foo returns, main cleans the argument up.
    – che
    Mar 10, 2013 at 21:01
  • 1
    @che It does not need to be the stack, it depends on the ABI of the compiler. Sep 16, 2020 at 10:53

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