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I was trying to run the following as a one-liner to see the output of a c program:

$ gcc -o hi.o hi.c && ./hi.o && echo $?

However, that doesn't "return" or print anything. And the echo $? only works if I do that on a new line. For example:

$ gcc -o hi.o hi.c && ./hi.o
$ echo $?
21 # correct program output

Why does this behavior occur? What happens after the ./hi.o that (seems to) suppress output after it?

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  • What is the exit status of hi.o ? Does the compilation succeeds? (what is the content of hi.c?) the echo $? only works What does it print? 0? or nonzero?
    – KamilCuk
    Jul 29, 2020 at 21:21
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    Note that the suffix .o is usually for object files, not executable files. Jul 29, 2020 at 21:25
  • @Someprogrammerdude thanks -- what's the most common output format then for a c file (I thought that was mostly arbitrary?) -- I think without specifying anything I get a.out.
    – David542
    Jul 29, 2020 at 21:37
  • @KamilCuk -- it returns the int 21 from main.
    – David542
    Jul 29, 2020 at 21:38
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    On Linux (and other POSIX systems) executables typically don' have any suffix at all. See e.g. the gcc command, which is a normal runable programs like many other commands. Jul 29, 2020 at 21:41

1 Answer 1

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Probably one of the previous commands failed (had a nonzero exit code). && works like in most program languages, it short-circuits. So if I write true && false && true, the last true command is never run because the false command returned a non-success exit code.

(There is also || which does the opposite: it runs the right-hand side only if the left-hand side failed.)

According to your question, ./hi.o returned exit code 21 which is nonzero, so it is considered as failed and the echo $? is not executed.

To unconditionally chain commands, use ; instead:

gcc -o hi.o hi.c; ./hi.o; echo $?

You can also make it so that hi.o will run only when gcc succeeded, as it was before, but then in any case run the echo:

gcc -o hi.o hi.c && ./hi.o; echo $?

(This works without parentheses because ; has a lower precedence than &&.)

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    thanks for this extensive answer. I think my issue was that the c program was returning a non-zero status ("21" in my case) and it treats non-zero as an error.
    – David542
    Jul 29, 2020 at 22:53

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