Through a little typo, I accidentally found this construct:
int main(void) {
char foo = 'c';
switch(foo)
{
printf("Cant Touch This\n"); // This line is Unreachable
case 'a': printf("A\n"); break;
case 'b': printf("B\n"); break;
case 'c': printf("C\n"); break;
case 'd': printf("D\n"); break;
}
return 0;
}
It seems that the printf
at the top of the switch
statement is valid, but also completely unreachable.
I got a clean compile, without even a warning about unreachable code, but this seems pointless.
Should a compiler flag this as unreachable code?
Does this serve any purpose at all?
-Wswitch-unreachable
goto
in and out of the otherwise unreachable part, which may be useful for various hacks.switch
is just a conditionalgoto
with multiple labels. There are more or less same restrictions on it's body as you would have on a regular block of code filled with goto labels.