Consider these two function definitions:
void foo() { }
void foo(void) { }
Is there any difference between these two? If not, why is the void
argument there? Aesthetic reasons?
In C:
void foo()
means "a function foo
taking an unspecified number of arguments of unspecified type" void foo(void)
means "a function foo
taking no arguments"In C++:
void foo()
means "a function foo
taking no arguments" void foo(void)
means "a function foo
taking no arguments"By writing foo(void)
, therefore, we achieve the same interpretation across both languages and make our headers multilingual (though we usually need to do some more things to the headers to make them truly cross-language; namely, wrap them in an extern "C"
if we're compiling C++).
void
, then it could have avoided the "most vexing parse" problem.
Jan 4, 2010 at 17:47
void foo()
was the only syntax to declare a function. When signatures where introduced, the C committee had to disambiguate the no-parameter from the old syntax, and introduced the void foo(void)
syntax. C++ took it for the sake of compatibility.
Sep 14, 2011 at 8:14
void foo()
instead of void foo(void)
will produce a functional difference? I.e. I have been using the version without the void for many years and havent seen any problem, am I missing something?
Nov 7, 2011 at 8:30
void foo() { if ( rand() ) foo(5); }
compiles and runs (causing undefined behaviour unless you're very lucky), whereas void foo(void)
with the same body would cause a compilation error.
I realize your question pertains to C++, but when it comes to C the answer can be found in K&R, pages 72-73:
Furthermore, if a function declaration does not include arguments, as in
double atof();
that too is taken to mean that nothing is to be assumed about the arguments of atof; all parameter checking is turned off. This special meaning of the empty argument list is intended to permit older C programs to compile with new compilers. But it's a bad idea to use it with new programs. If the function takes arguments, declare them; if it takes no arguments, use void.
C++11 N3337 standard draft
There is no difference.
http://www.open-std.org/jtc1/sc22/wg21/docs/papers/2012/n3337.pdf
Annex C "Compatibility" C.1.7 Clause 8: declarators says:
8.3.5 Change: In C ++ , a function declared with an empty parameter list takes no arguments. In C, an empty parameter list means that the number and type of the function arguments are unknown.
Example:
int f(); // means int f(void) in C ++ // int f( unknown ) in C
Rationale: This is to avoid erroneous function calls (i.e., function calls with the wrong number or type of arguments).
Effect on original feature: Change to semantics of well-defined feature. This feature was marked as “obsolescent” in C.
8.5.3 functions says:
4. The parameter-declaration-clause determines the arguments that can be specified, and their processing, when the function is called. [...] If the parameter-declaration-clause is empty, the function takes no arguments. The parameter list (void) is equivalent to the empty parameter list.
C99
As mentioned by C++11, int f()
specifies nothing about the arguments, and is obsolescent.
It can either lead to working code or UB.
I have interpreted the C99 standard in detail at: https://stackoverflow.com/a/36292431/895245
In C, you use a void in an empty function reference so that the compiler has a prototype, and that prototype has "no arguments". In C++, you don't have to tell the compiler that you have a prototype because you can't leave out the prototype.