I am not sure what you're trying to do here, but you are re-declaring a
as both a static and external variable, in different order.
When applied to a variable, static
allows global variables to only be visible within that file. extern
declares an external variable, defined elsewhere. So for example you would declare a
as extern if it was originally defined in a separate file, and declare it as static
if it should only be visible within this file itself.
Here are the errors:
test.c:8:12: error: static declaration of ‘a’ follows non-static declaration
test.c:7:12: note: previous declaration of ‘a’ was here
You declare a
as an external variable (defined in a different file), but then re-declare it as static, only visible within this file.
In this case I would review what those storage classes (extern, static, etc) mean and then decide how your variable should be declared.
TRUE
is defined, but not if it isn't. – Fred Foo Sep 20 '11 at 12:09extern
declaration after parsing thestatic
one. – Mr. Shickadance Sep 20 '11 at 12:10