28

Why is this not valid

for( int i = 0, int x = 0; some condition; ++i, ++x )

and this is

int i, x;
for( i = 0, x = 0; some condition; ++i, ++x )

Thanks

3

7 Answers 7

43

when you need to declare two variables of different types, it can't be done by one declaration

Hackety hack hack:

for (struct {int i; char c;} loop = {0, 'a'}; loop.i < 26; ++loop.i, ++loop.c)
{
    std::cout << loop.c << '\n';
}

;-)

2
  • 5
    Wow! Never heard of this before.
    – sharptooth
    Feb 26, 2010 at 12:26
  • That seems like a nice hack. Would you comment on some strange detail? If I replace type of i variable with something like std::vector<int>::const_iterator, it won't compile... It seems like dirty code anyway to write long temporary struct with two iterators in the for loop, but I just thirst for understanding.
    – Dmitri K
    Aug 7, 2014 at 12:01
41

this works:

for( int i = 0, x = 0; some condition; ++i, ++x )

it's a variable declaration:

int i, j; // correct
int i, int j; // wrong, must not repeat type
1
  • Thanks for fixing spelling mistakes on my question
    – user14629932
    Dec 6, 2020 at 23:22
11

Why should it be valid? It is a syntactically meaningless construst. What were you trying to say with it?

The first part of for header is a declaration. The

int i = 0, int x = 0

is not a valid declaration. It will not compile in for for the same reason why it won't compile anywhere else in the program

int i = 0, int x = 0; // Syntax error

When you need to declare two objects of type int in one declaration, you do it as follows

int i = 0, x = 0; // OK

The same thing can be used in for

for( int i = 0, x = 0; some condition; ++i, ++x )  

(But when you need to declare two variables of different types, it can't be done by one declaration and, therefore, both cannot be declared in for at the same time. At least one of them will have to be declared before for.)

8

Correct version is

for (int i = 0, x = 0; some condition; ++i, ++x)
4

This is legal:

    for(int i = 0, x = 0; condition; ++i, ++x );

int x, int y is not a legal way of declaring variables;

3

Because a variable declaration (like int x) is not an expression and the comma operator (,) only combines expressions.

2
  • This exposes a sad limitation of the for loop initialisation block. i.e. All variables initialised in the initialisation block must be the same type. Feb 26, 2010 at 7:37
  • Beware, the , in the declaration int x, y; is NOT the comma operator! Feb 26, 2010 at 12:20
0

I implemented this approach to calculate the diagonal difference. Here I am calculating the sum of Antidiagonal.

 for(int i=0,j=n-1; i<n,j>=0;i++,j--){
    sum_right += a[i][j];
  }

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