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StatementThis is the GNU C reference manual.
This is a reference manual for the C programming language as implemented by the GNU Compiler Collection (GCC). Specifically, this manual aims to document:
This manual describes C89 as its baseline. C99 features and GNU extensions are explicitly labeled as such.
By default, GCC will compile code as C89 plus GNU-specific extensions. Much of C99 is supported; once full support is available, the default compilation dialect will be C99 plus GNU-specific extensions. (Some of the GNU extensions to C89 ended up, sometimes slightly modified, as standard language features in C99.)
The C language includes a set of preprocessor directives, which are used for things such as macro text replacement, conditional compilation, and file inclusion. Although normally described in a C language manual, the GNU C preprocessor has been thoroughly documented in The C Preprocessor, a separate manual which covers preprocessing for C, C++, and Objective-C programs, so it is not included here.
Contributors who have helped with writing, editing, proofreading, ideas, typesetting, or administrative details include: Nelson H. F. Beebe, Karl Berry, Robert Chassell, Andreas Foerster, Denver Gingerich, Lisa Goldstein, Robert Hansen, Jean-Christophe Helary, Teddy Hogeborn, Joe Humphries, J. Wren Hunt, Adam Johansen, Steve Morningthunder, Richard Stallman, J. Otto Tennant, Ole Tetlie, Keith Thompson, T.F. Torrey, and James Youngman. Trevis Rothwell wrote most of the text and serves as project maintainer.
Some example programs are based on algorithms in Donald Knuth's The Art of Computer Programming.
Please send bug reports and suggestions to [email protected].
This chapter describes the lexical elements that make up C source code after preprocessing. These elements are called tokens. There are five types of tokens: keywords, identifiers, constants, operators, and separators. White space, sometimes required to separate tokens, is also described in this chapter.
Identifiers are sequences of characters used for naming variables, functions, new data types, and preprocessor macros. You can include letters, decimal digits, and the underscore character ‘_’ in identifiers.
The first character of an identifier cannot be a digit.
Lowercase letters and uppercase letters are distinct, such that foo
and FOO
are two different identifiers.
When using GNU extensions, you can also include the dollar sign character ‘$’ in identifiers.
Keywords are special identifiers reserved for use as part of the programming language itself. You cannot use them for any other purpose.
Here is a list of keywords recognized by ANSI C89:
auto break case char const continue default do double else enum extern float for goto if int long register return short signed sizeof static struct switch typedef union unsigned void volatile while
ISO C99 adds the following keywords:
inline _Bool _Complex _Imaginary
and GNU extensions add these keywords:
__FUNCTION__ __PRETTY_FUNCTION__ __alignof __alignof__ __asm __asm__ __attribute __attribute__ __builtin_offsetof __builtin_va_arg __complex __complex__ __const __extension__ __func__ __imag __imag__ __inline __inline__ __label__ __null __real __real__ __restrict __restrict__ __signed __signed__ __thread __typeof __volatile __volatile__
In both ISO C99 and C89 with GNU extensions, the following is also recogized as a keyboard:
restrict
A constant is a literal numeric or character value, such as 5 or `m'. All constants are of a particular data type; you can use type casting to explicitly specify the type of a constant, or let the compiler use the default type based on the value of the constant.
An integer constant is a sequence of digits, with an optional prefix to denote a number base.
If the sequence of digits is preceded by 0x
or 0X
(zero x or zero X), then the constant is considered to be hexadecimal (base 16). Hexadecimal values may use the digits from 0 to 9, as well as the letters a
to f
and A
to F
. Here are some examples:
0x2f 0x88 0xAB43 0xAbCd 0x1
If the first digit is 0 (zero), and the next character is not ‘x’ or ‘X’, then the constant is considered to be octal (base 8). Octal values may only use the digits from 0 to 7; 8 and 9 are not allowed. Here are some examples:
057 012 03 0241
In all other cases, the sequence of digits is assumed to be decimal (base 10). Decimal values may use the digits from 0 to 9. Here are some examples:
459 23901 8 12
There are various integer data types, for short integers, long integers, signed integers, and unsigned integers. You can force an integer constant to be of a long and/or unsigned integer type by appending a sequence of one or more letters to the end of the constant:
u
U
l
L
For example, 45U
is an unsigned int
constant. You can also combine letters: 45UL
is an unsigned long int
constant. (The letters may be used in any order.)
Both ISO C99 and GNU C extensions add the integer types long long int
and unsigned long long int
. You can use two ‘L’s to get a long long int
constant; add a ‘U’ to that and you have an unsigned long long int
constant. For example: 45ULL
.
A character constant is usually a single character enclosed within single quotation marks, such as 'Q'
. A character constant is of type int
by default.
Some characters, such as the single quotation mark character itself, cannot be represented using only one character. To represent such characters, there are several “escape sequences” that you can use:
\\
\?
\'
\"
\a
\b
\e
\f
\n
\r
\t
\v
\o, \oo, \ooo
\xh, \xhh, \xhhh, ...
To use any of these escape sequences, enclose the sequence in single quotes, and treat it as if it were any other character. For example, the letter m is'm'
and the newline character is '\n'
.
The octal number escape sequence is the backslash character followed by one, two, or three octal digits (0 to 7). For example, 101 is the octal equivalent of 65, which is the ASCII character 'A'
. Thus, the character constant '\101'
is the same as the character constant 'A'
.
The hexadecimal escape sequence is the backslash character, followed by x
and an unlimited number of hexadecimal digits (0 to 9, and a
to f
or A
to F
).
While the length of possible hexadecimal digit strings is unlimited, the number of character constants in any given character set is not. (The much-used extended ASCII character set, for example, has only 256 characters in it.) If you try to use a hexadecimal value that is outside the range of characters, you will get a compile-time error.
A real number constant is a value that represents a fractional (floating point) number. It consists of a sequence of digits which represents the integer (or “whole”) part of the number, a decimal point, and a sequence of digits which represents the fractional part.
Either the integer part or the fractional part may be omitted, but not both. Here are some examples:
double a, b, c, d, e, f; a = 4.7; b = 4.; c = 4; d = .7; e = 0.7;
(In the third assignment statement, the integer constant 4 is automatically converted from an integer value to a double value.)
Real number constants can also be followed by e
or E
, and an integer exponent. The exponent can be either positive or negative.
double x, y; x = 5e2; /*x
is 5 * 100, or 500.0. */ y = 5e-2; /*y
is 5 * (1/100, or 0.05. */
You can append a letter to the end of a real number constant to cause it to be of a particular type. If you append the letter F (or f) to a real number constant, then its type is float
. If you append the letter L (or l), then its type is long double
. If you do not append any letters, then its type is double
.
A string constant is a sequence of zero or more characters, digits, and escape sequences enclosed within double quotation marks. A string constant is of type “array of characters”. All string constants contain a null termination character (\0
) as their last character. Strings are stored as arrays of characters, with no inherent size attribute. The null termination character lets string-processing functions know where the string ends.
Adjacent string constants are concatenated (combined) into one string, with the null termination character added to the end of the final concatenated string.
A string cannot contain double quotation marks, as double quotation marks are used to enclose the string. To include the double quotation mark character in a string, use the \"
escape sequence. You can use any of the escape sequences that can be used as character constants in strings. Here are some example of string constants:
/* This is a single string constant. */ "tutti frutti ice cream" /* These string constants will be concatenated, same as above. */ "tutti " "frutti" " ice " "cream" /* This one uses two escape sequences. */ "\"hello, world!\""
If a string is too long to fit on one line, you can use a backslash \
to break it up onto separate lines.
"Today's special is a pastrami sandwich on rye bread with \ a potato knish and a cherry soda."
Adjacent strings are automatically concatenated, so you can also have string constants span multiple lines by writing them as separate, adjacent, strings. For example:
"Tomorrow's special is a corned beef sandwich on " "pumpernickel bread with a kasha knish and seltzer water."
is the same as
"Tomorrow's special is a corned beef sandwich on \ pumpernickel bread with a kasha knish and seltzer water."
To insert a newline character into the string, so that when the string is printed it will be printed on two different lines, you can use the newline escape sequence ‘\n’.
printf ("potato\nknish");
prints
potato knish
An operator is a special token that performs an operation, such as addition or subtraction, on either one, two, or three operands. Full coverage of operators can be found in a later chapter. See Expressions and Operators.
A separator separates tokens. White space (see next section) is a separator, but it is not a token. The other separators are all single-character tokens themselves:
( ) [ ] { } ; , . :
White space is the collective term used for several characters: the space character, the tab character, the newline character, the vertical tab character, and the form-feed character. White space is ignored (outside of string and character constants), and is therefore optional, except when it is used to separate tokens. This means that
#include <stdio.h> int main() { printf( "hello, world\n" ); return 0; }
and
#include <stdio.h> int main(){printf("hello, world\n"); return 0;}
are functionally the same program.
Although you must use white space to separate many tokens, no white space is required between operators and operands, nor is it required between other separators and that which they separate.
/* All of these are valid. */
x++;
x ++ ;
x=y+z;
x = y + z ;
x=array[2];
x = array [ 2 ] ;
fraction=numerator / *denominator_ptr;
fraction = numerator / * denominator_ptr ;
Furthermore, wherever one space is allowed, any amount of white space is allowed.
/* These two statements are functionally identical. */
x++;
x
++ ;
In string constants, spaces and tabs are not ignored; rather, they are part of the string. Therefore,
"potato knish"
is not the same as
"potato knish"
The integer data types range in size from at least 8 bits to at least 32 bits. The C99 standard extends this range to include integer sizes of at least 64 bits. You should use integer types for storing whole number values (and the char
data type for storing characters). The sizes and ranges listed for these types are minimums; depending on your computer platform, these sizes and ranges may be larger.
While these ranges provide a natural ordering, the standard does not require that any two types have a different range. For example, it is common for int
and long
to have the same range. The standard even allows signed char
and long
to have the same range, though such platforms are very unusual.
signed char
signed char
data type can hold integer values in the range of −128 to 127.unsigned char
unsigned char
data type can hold integer values in the range of 0 to 255.char
char
data type is defined as having the same range as either the signed char
or the unsigned char
data type (they are three distinct types, however). By convention, you should use the char
data type specifically for storing ASCII characters (such as `m'
), including escape sequences (such as `\n'
).short int
short int
data type can hold integer values in the range of −32,768 to 32,767. You may also refer to this data type as short
, signed short int
, or signed short
.unsigned short int
unsigned short int
data type can hold integer values in the range of 0 to 65,535. You may also refer to this data type as unsigned short
.int
int
data type can hold integer values in the range of −2,147,483,648 to 2,147,483,647. You may also refer to this data type as signed int
orsigned
.unsigned int
unsigned int
data type can hold integer values in the range of 0 to 4,294,967,295. You may also refer to this data type simply as unsigned
.long int
long int
data type can hold integer values in the range of at least −2,147,483,648 to 2,147,483,647. (Depending on your system, this data type might be 64-bit, in which case its range is identical to that of the long long int
data type.) You may also refer to this data type as long
, signed long int
, or signed long
.unsigned long int
unsigned long int
data type can hold integer values in the range of at least 0 to 4,294,967,295. (Depending on your system, this data type might be 64-bit, in which case its range is identical to that of the unsigned long long int
data type.) You may also refer to this data type as unsigned long
.long long int
long long int
data type can hold integer values in the range of −9,223,372,036,854,775,808 to 9,223,372,036,854,775,807. You may also refer to this data type as long long
, signed long long int
or signed long long
. This type is not part of C89, but is both part of C99 and a GNU C extension.unsigned long long int
unsigned long long int
data type can hold integer values in the range of at least 0 to 18,446,744,073,709,551,615. You may also refer to this data type as unsigned long long
. This type is not part of C89, but is both part of C99 and a GNU C extension.Here are some examples of declaring and defining integer variables:
int foo; unsigned int bar = 42; char quux = 'a';
The first line declares an integer named foo
but does not define its value; it is left unintialized, and its value should not be assumed to be anything in particular.
There are three data types that represent fractional numbers. While the sizes and ranges of these types are consistent across most computer systems in use today, historically the sizes of these types varied from system to system. As such, the minimum and maximum values are stored in macro definitions in the library header file float.h
. In this section, we include the names of the macro definitions in place of their possible values; check your system's float.h
for specific numbers.
float
float
data type is the smallest of the three floating point types, if they differ in size at all. Its minimum value is stored in the FLT_MIN
, and should be no greater than 1e-37
. Its maximum value is stored in FLT_MAX
, and should be no less than 1e37
.double
double
data type is at least as large as the float
type, and it may be larger. Its minimum value is stored in DBL_MIN
, and its maximum value is stored in DBL_MAX
.long double
long double
data type is at least as large as the float
type, and it may be larger. Its minimum value is stored in LDBL_MIN
, and its maximum value is stored in LDBL_MAX
.All floating point data types are signed; trying to use unsigned float
, for example, will cause a compile-time error.
Here are some examples of declaring and defining real number variables:
float foo; double bar = 114.3943;
The first line declares a float named foo
but does not define its value; it is left unintialized, and its value should not be assumed to be anything in particular.
The real number types provided in C are of finite precision, and accordingly, not all real numbers can be represented exactly. Most computer systems that GCC compiles for use a binary representation for real numbers, which is unable to precisely represent numbers such as, for example, 4.2. For this reason, we recommend that you consider not comparing real numbers for exact equality with the ==
operator, but rather check that real numbers are within an acceptable tolerance.
There are other more subtle implications of these imprecise representations; for more details, see David Goldberg's paper What Every Computer Scientist Should Know About Floating-Point Arithmetic and section 4.2.2 of Donald Knuth's The Art of Computer Programming.
GCC introduced some complex number types as an extension to C89. Similar features were introduced in C991, but there were a number of differences. We describe the standard complex number types first.
Complex types were introduced in C99. There are three complex types:
float _Complex
double _Complex
long double _Complex
The names here begin with an underscore and an uppercase letter in order to avoid conflicts with existing programs' identifiers. However, the C99 standard header file <complex.h>
introduces some macros which make using complex types easier.
complex
_Complex
. This allows a variable to be declared as double complex
which seems more natural.I
const float _Complex
having the value of the imaginary unit normally referred to as i.The <complex.h>
header file also declares a number of functions for performing computations on complex numbers, for example the creal
and cimag
functions which respectively return the real and imaginary parts of a double complex
number. Other functions are also provided, as shown in this example:
#include <complex.h> #include <stdio.h> void example (void) { complex double z = 1.0 + 3.0*I; printf ("Phase is %f, modulus is %f\n", carg (z), cabs (z)); }
GCC also introduced complex types as a GNU extension to C89, but the spelling is different. The floating-point complex types in GCC's C89 extension are:
__complex__ float
__complex__ double
__complex__ long double
GCC's extension allow for complex types other than floating-point, so that you can declare complex character types and complex integer types; in fact__complex__
can be used with any of the primitive data types. We won't give you a complete list of all possibilities, but here are some examples:
__complex__ float
__complex__ float
data type has two components: a real part and an imaginary part, both of which are of the float
data type.__complex__ int
__complex__ int
data type also has two components: a real part and an imaginary part, both of which are of the int
data type.To extract the real part of a complex-valued expression, use the keyword __real__
, followed by the expression. Likewise, use __imag__
to extract the imaginary part.
__complex__ float a = 4 + 3i; float b = __real__ a; /*b
is now 4. */ float c = __imag__ a; /*c
is now 3. */
This example creates a complex floating point variable a
, and defines its real part as 4 and its imaginary part as 3. Then, the real part is assigned to the floating point variable b
, and the imaginary part is assigned to the floating point variable c
.
An enumeration is a custom data type used for storing constant integer values and referring to them by names. By default, these values are of type signed int
; however, you can use the -fshort-enums
GCC compiler option to cause the smallest possible integer type to be used instead. Both of these behaviors conform to the C89 standard, but mixing the use of these options within the same program can produce incompatibilities.
You define an enumeration using the enum
keyword, followed by the name of the enumeration (this is optional), followed by a list of constant names (separated by commas and enclosed in braces), and ending with a semicolon.
enum fruit {grape, cherry, lemon, kiwi};
That example defines an enumeration, fruit
, which contains four constant integer values, grape
, cherry
, lemon
, and kiwi
, whose values are, by default, 0, 1, 2, and 3, respectively. You can also specify one or more of the values explicitly:
enum more_fruit {banana = -17, apple, blueberry, mango};
That example defines banana
to be −17, and the remaining values are incremented by 1: apple
is −16, blueberry
is −15, and mango
is -14. Unless specified otherwise, an enumeration value is equal to one more than the previous value (and the first value defaults to 0).
You can also refer to an enumeration value defined earlier in the same enumeration:
enum yet_more_fruit {kumquat, raspberry, peach, plum = peach + 2};
In that example, kumquat
is 0, raspberry
is 1, peach
is 2, and plum
is 4.
You can't use the same name for an enum
as a struct
or union
in the same scope.
You can declare variables of an enumeration type both when the enumeration is defined and afterward. This example declares one variable, named my_fruit
of type enum fruit
, all in a single statement:
enum fruit {banana, apple, blueberry, mango} my_fruit;
while this example declares the type and variable separately:
enum fruit {banana, apple, blueberry, mango}; enum fruit my_fruit;
(Of course, you couldn't declare it that way if you hadn't named the enumeration.)
Although such variables are considered to be of an enumeration type, you can assign them any value that you could assign to an int
variable, including values from other enumerations. Furthermore, any variable that can be assigned an int
value can be assigned a value from an enumeration.
However, you cannot change the values in an enumeration once it has been defined; they are constant values. For example, this won't work:
enum fruit {banana, apple, blueberry, mango};
banana = 15; /* You can't do this! */
Enumerations are useful in conjunction with the switch
statement, because the compiler can warn you if you have failed to handle one of the enumeration values. Using the example above, if your code handles banana
, apple
and mango
only but not blueberry
, GCC can generate a warning.
A union is a custom data type used for storing several variables in the same memory space. Although you can access any of those variables at any time, you should only read from one of them at a time—assigning a value to one of them overwrites the values in the others.
You define a union using the union
keyword followed by the declarations of the union's members, enclosed in braces. You declare each member of a union just as you would normally declare a variable—using the data type followed by one or more variable names separated by commas, and ending with a semicolon. Then end the union definition with a semicolon after the closing brace.
You should also include a name for the union between the union
keyword and the opening brace. This is syntactically optional, but if you leave it out, you can't refer to that union data type later on (without a typedef
, see The typedef Statement).
Here is an example of defining a simple union for holding an integer value and a floating point value:
union numbers { int i; float f; };
That defines a union named numbers
, which contains two members, i
and f
, which are of type int
and float
, respectively.
You can declare variables of a union type when both you initially define the union and after the definition, provided you gave the union type a name.
You can declare variables of a union type when you define the union type by putting the variable names after the closing brace of the union definition, but before the final semicolon. You can declare more than one such variable by separating the names with commas.
union numbers { int i; float f; } first_number, second_number;
That example declares two variables of type union numbers
, first_number
and second_number
.
You can declare variables of a union type after you define the union by using the union
keyword and the name you gave the union type, followed by one or more variable names separated by commas.
union numbers { int i; float f; }; union numbers first_number, second_number;
That example declares two variables of type union numbers
, first_number
and second_number
.
You can initialize the first member of a union variable when you declare it:
union numbers { int i; float f; }; union numbers first_number = { 5 };
In that example, the i
member of first_number
gets the value 5. The f
member is left alone.
Another way to initialize a union member is to specify the name of the member to initialize. This way, you can initialize whichever member you want to, not just the first one. There are two methods that you can use—either follow the member name with a colon, and then its value, like this:
union numbers first_number = { f: 3.14159 };
or precede the member name with a period and assign a value with the assignment operator, like this:
union numbers first_number = { .f = 3.14159 };
You can also initialize a union member when you declare the union variable during the definition:
union numbers { int i; float f; } first_number = { 5 };
You can access the members of a union variable using the member access operator. You put the name of the union variable on the left side of the operator, and the name of the member on the right side.
union numbers { int i; float f; }; union numbers first_number; first_number.i = 5; first_number.f = 3.9;
Notice in that example that giving a value to the f
member overrides the value stored in the i
member.
This size of a union is equal to the size of its largest member. Consider the first union example from this section:
union numbers { int i; float f; };
The size of the union data type is the same as sizeof (float)
, because the float
type is larger than the int
type. Since all of the members of a union occupy the same memory space, the union data type size doesn't need to be large enough to hold the sum of all their sizes; it just needs to be large enough to hold the largest member.
A structure is a programmer-defined data type made up of variables of other data types (possibly including other structure types).
You define a structure using the struct
keyword followed by the declarations of the structure's members, enclosed in braces. You declare each member of a structure just as you would normally declare a variable—using the data type followed by one or more variable names separated by commas, and ending with a semicolon. Then end the structure definition with a semicolon after the closing brace.
You should also include a name for the structure in between the struct
keyword and the opening brace. This is optional, but if you leave it out, you can't refer to that structure data type later on (without a typedef
, see The typedef Statement).
Here is an example of defining a simple structure for holding the X and Y coordinates of a point:
struct point { int x, y; };
That defines a structure type named struct point
, which contains two members, x
and y
, both of which are of type int
.
Structures (and unions) may contain instances of other structures and unions, but of course not themselves. It is possible for a structure or union type to contain a field which is a pointer to the same type (see Incomplete Types).
You can declare variables of a structure type when both you initially define the structure and after the definition, provided you gave the structure type a name.
You can declare variables of a structure type when you define the structure type by putting the variable names after the closing brace of the structure definition, but before the final semicolon. You can declare more than one such variable by separating the names with commas.
struct point { int x, y; } first_point, second_point;
That example declares two variables of type struct point
, first_point
and second_point
.
You can declare variables of a structure type after defining the structure by using the struct
keyword and the name you gave the structure type, followed by one or more variable names separated by commas.
struct point { int x, y; }; struct point first_point, second_point;
That example declares two variables of type struct point
, first_point
and second_point
.
You can initialize the members of a structure type to have certain values when you declare structure variables.
If you do not initialize a structure variable, the effect depends on whether it is has static storage (see Storage Class Specifiers) or not. If it is, members with integral types are initialized with 0 and pointer members are initialized to NULL; otherwise, the value of the structure's members is indeterminate.
One way to initialize a structure is to specify the values in a set of braces and separated by commas. Those values are assigned to the structure members in the same order that the members are declared in the structure in definition.
struct point { int x, y; }; struct point first_point = { 5, 10 };
In that example, the x
member of first_point
gets the value 5, and the y
member gets the value 10.
Another way to initialize the members is to specify the name of the member to initialize. This way, you can initialize the members in any order you like, and even leave some of them uninitialized. There are two methods that you can use. The first method is available in C99 and as a C89 extension in GCC:
struct point first_point = { .y = 10, .x = 5 };
You can also omit the period and use a colon instead of ‘=’, though this is a GNU C extension:
struct point first_point = { y: 10, x: 5 };
You can also initialize the structure variable's members when you declare the variable during the structure definition:
struct point { int x, y; } first_point = { 5, 10 };
You can also initialize fewer than all of a structure variable's members:
struct pointy { int x, y; char *p; }; struct pointy first_pointy = { 5 };
Here, x
is initialized with 5, y
is initialized with 0, and p
is initialized with NULL. The rule here is that y
and p
are initialized just as they would be if they were static variables.
Here is another example that initializes a structure's members which are structure variables themselves:
struct point { int x, y; }; struct rectangle { struct point top_left, bottom_right; }; struct rectangle my_rectangle = { {0, 5}, {10, 0} };
That example defines the rectangle
structure to consist of two point
structure variables. Then it declares one variable of type struct rectangle
and initializes its members. Since its members are structure variables, we used an extra set of braces surrounding the members that belong to the point
structure variables. However, those extra braces are not necessary; they just make the code easier to read.
You can access the members of a structure variable using the member access operator. You put the name of the structure variable on the left side of the operator, and the name of the member on the right side.
struct point { int x, y; }; struct point first_point; first_point.x = 0; first_point.y = 5;
You can also access the members of a structure variable which is itself a member of a structure variable.
struct rectangle { struct point top_left, bottom_right; }; struct rectangle my_rectangle; my_rectangle.top_left.x = 0; my_rectangle.top_left.y = 5; my_rectangle.bottom_right.x = 10; my_rectangle.bottom_right.y = 0;
You can create structures with integer members of nonstandard sizes, called bit fields. You do this by specifying an integer (int
, char
, long int
, etc.) member as usual, and inserting a colon and the number of bits that the member should occupy in between the member's name and the semicolon.
struct card { unsigned int suit : 2; unsigned int face_value : 4; };
That example defines a structure type with two bit fields, suit
and face_value
, which take up 2 bits and 4 bits, respectively. suit
can hold values from 0 to 3, and face_value
can hold values from 0 to 15. Notice that these bit fields were declared as unsigned int
; had they been signed integers, then their ranges would have been from −2 to 1, and from −8 to 7, respectively.
More generally, the range of an unsigned bit field of N bits is from 0 to 2^N - 1, and the range of a signed bit field of N bits is from -(2^N) / 2 to ((2^N) / 2) - 1.
Bit fields can be specified without a name in order to control which actual bits within the containing unit are used. However, the effect of this is not very portable and it is rarely useful. You can also specify a bit field of size 0, which indicates that subsequent bit fields not further bit fields should be packed into the unit containing the previous bit field. This is likewise not generally useful.
You may not take the address of a bit field with the address operator &
(see Pointer Operators).
The size of a structure type is equal to the sum of the size of all of its members, possibly including padding to cause the structure type to align to a particular byte boundary. The details vary depending on your computer platform, but it would not be atypical to see structures padded to align on four- or eight-byte boundaries. This is done in order to speed up memory accesses of instances of the structure type.
As a GNU extension, GCC allows structures with no members. Such structures have zero size.
If you wish to explicitly omit padding from your structure types (which may, in turn, decrease the speed of structure memory accesses), then GCC provides multiple methods of turning packing off. The quick and easy method is to use the -fpack-struct
compiler option. For more details on omitting packing, please see the GCC manual which corresponds to your version of the compiler.
An array is a data structure that lets you store one or more elements consecutively in memory. In C, array elements are indexed beginning at position zero, not one.
You declare an array by specifying the data type for its elements, its name, and the number of elements it can store. Here is an example that declares an array that can store ten integers:
int my_array[10];
For standard C code, the number of elements in an array must be positive.
As a GNU extension, the number of elements can be as small as zero. Zero-length arrays are useful as the last element of a structure which is really a header for a variable-length object:
struct line { int length; char contents[0]; }; { struct line *this_line = (struct line *) malloc (sizeof (struct line) + this_length); this_line -> length = this_length; }
Another GNU extension allows you to declare an array size using variables, rather than only constants. For example, here is a function definition that declares an array using its parameter as the number of elements:
int my_function (int number) { int my_array[number]; ...; }
You can initialize the elements in an array when you declare it by listing the initializing values, separated by commas, in a set of braces. Here is an example:
int my_array[5] = { 0, 1, 2, 3, 4 };
You don't have to initialize all of the array elements. For example, this code initializes only the first three elements:
int my_array[5] = { 0, 1, 2 };
Items that are not explicitly initialized will have an indeterminate value unless the array is of static storage duration. For arrays of static storage duration, arithmetic types are initialized as zero and pointers are initialized as NULL.
So, in the example above, if the definition is at file level or is preceded by static
, the final two elements will be 0. Otherwise, the final two elements will have an indeterminate value.
When using either ISO C99, or C89 with GNU extensions, you can initialize array elements out of order, by specifying which array indices to initialize. To do this, include the array index in brackets, and optionally the assignment operator, before the value. Here is an example:
int my_array[5] = { [2] 5, [4] 9 };
Or, using the assignment operator:
int my_array[5] = { [2] = 5, [4] = 9 };
Both of those examples are equivalent to:
int my_array[5] = { 0, 0, 5, 0, 9 };
When using GNU extensions, you can initialize a range of elements to the same value, by specifying the first and last indices, in the form [
first] ... [
last]
. Here is an example:
int new_array[100] = { [0 ... 9] = 1, [10 ... 98] = 2, 3 };
That initializes elements 0 through 9 to 1, elements 10 through 98 to 2, and element 99 to 3. (You also could explicitly write [99] = 3
.) Also, notice that you must have spaces on both sides of the ‘...’.
If you initialize every element of an array, then you do not have to specify its size; its size is determined by the number of elements you initialize. Here is an example:
int my_array[] = { 0, 1, 2, 3, 4 };
Although this does not explicitly state that the array has five elements using my_array[5]
, it initializes five elements, so that is how many it has.
Alternately, if you specify which elements to initialize, then the size of the array is equal to the highest element number initialized, plus one. For example:
int my_array[] = { 0, 1, 2, [99] = 99 };
In that example, only four elements are initialized, but the last one initialized is element number 99, so there are 100 elements.
You can access the elements of an array by specifying the array name, followed by the element index, enclosed in brackets. Remember that the array elements are numbered starting with zero. Here is an example:
my_array[0] = 5;
That assigns the value 5 to the first element in the array, at position zero. You can treat individual array elements like variables of whatever data type the array is made up of. For example, if you have an array made of a structure data type, you can access the structure elements like this:
struct point { int x, y; }; struct point point_array[2] = { {4, 5}, {8, 9} }; point_array[0].x = 3;
You can make multidimensional arrays, or “arrays of arrays”. You do this by adding an extra set of brackets and array lengths for every additional dimension you want your array to have. For example, here is a declaration for a two-dimensional array that holds five elements in each dimension (a two-element array consisting of five-element arrays):
int two_dimensions[2][5] { {1, 2, 3, 4, 5}, {6, 7, 8, 9, 10} };
Multidimensional array elements are accessed by specifying the desired index of both dimensions:
two_dimensions[1][3] = 12;
In our example, two_dimensions[0]
is itself an array. The element two_dimensions[0][2]
is followed by two_dimensions[0][3]
, not by two_dimensions[1][2]
.
You can use an array of characters to hold a string (see String Constants). The array may be built of either signed or unsigned characters.
When you declare the array, you can specify the number of elements it will have. That number will be the maximum number of characters that should be in the string, including the null character used to end the string. If you choose this option, then you do not have to initialize the array when you declare it. Alternately, you can simply initialize the array to a value, and its size will then be exactly large enough to hold whatever string you used to initialize it.
There are two different ways to initialize the array. You can specify of comma-delimited list of characters enclosed in braces, or you can specify a string literal enclosed in double quotation marks.
Here are some examples:
char blue[26]; char yellow[26] = {'y', 'e', 'l', 'l', 'o', 'w', '\0'}; char orange[26] = "orange"; char gray[] = {'g', 'r', 'a', 'y', '\0'}; char salmon[] = "salmon";
In each of these cases, the null character \0
is included at the end of the string, even when not explicitly stated. (Note that if you initialize a string using an array of individual characters, then the null character is not guaranteed to be present. It might be, but such an occurrence would be one of chance, and should not be relied upon.)
After initialization, you cannot assign a new string literal to an array using the assignment operator. For example, this will not work:
char lemon[26] = "custard";
lemon = "steak sauce"; /* Fails! */
However, there are functions in the GNU C library that perform operations (including copy) on string arrays. You can also change one character at a time, by accessing individual string elements as you would any other array:
char name[] = "bob"; name[0] = 'r';
It is possible for you to explicitly state the number of elements in the array, and then initialize it using a string that has more characters than there are elements in the array. This is not a good thing. The larger string will not override the previously specified size of the array, and you will get a compile-time warning. Since the original array size remains, any part of the string that exceeds that original size is being written to a memory location that was not allocated for it.
You can create an array of a union type just as you can an array of a primitive data type.
union numbers { int i; float f; }; union numbers number_array [3];
That example creates a 3-element array of union numbers
variables called number_array
. You can also initialize the first members of the elements of a number array:
struct point point_array [3] = { {3}, {4}, {5} };
The additional inner grouping braces are optional.
After initialization, you can still access the union members in the array using the member access operator. You put the array name and element number (enclosed in brackets) to the left of the operator, and the member name to the right.
union numbers number_array [3]; number_array[0].i = 2;
You can create an array of a structure type just as you can an array of a primitive data type.
struct point { int x, y; }; struct point point_array [3];
That example creates a 3-element array of struct point
variables called point_array
. You can also initialize the elements of a structure array:
struct point point_array [3] = { {2, 3}, {4, 5}, {6, 7} };
As with initializing structures which contain structure members, the additional inner grouping braces are optional. But, if you use the additional braces, then you can partially initialize some of the structures in the array, and fully initialize others:
struct point point_array [3] = { {2}, {4, 5}, {6, 7} };
In that example, the first element of the array has only its x
member initialized. Because of the grouping braces, the value 4 is assigned to the x
member of the second array element, not to the y
member of the first element, as would be the case without the grouping braces.
After initialization, you can still access the structure members in the array using the member access operator. You put the array name and element number (enclosed in brackets) to the left of the operator, and the member name to the right.
struct point point_array [3]; point_array[0].x = 2; point_array[0].y = 3;
Pointers hold memory addresses of stored constants or variables. For any data type, including both primitive types and custom types, you can create a pointer that holds the memory address of an instance of that type.
You declare a pointer by specifying a name for it and a data type. The data type indicates of what type of variable the pointer will hold memory addresses.
To declare a pointer, include the indirection operator (see Pointer Operators) before the identifier. Here is the general form of a pointer declaration:
data-type * name;
White space is not significant around the indirection operator:
data-type *name; data-type* name;
Here is an example of declaring a pointer to hold the address of an int
variable:
int *ip;
Be careful, though: when declaring multiple pointers in the same statement, you must explicitly declare each as a pointer, using the indirection operator:
int *foo, *bar; /* Two pointers. */ int *baz, quux; /* A pointer and an integer variable. */
You can initialize a pointer when you first declare it by specifying a variable address to store in it. For example, the following code declares an int
variable ‘i’, and a pointer which is initialized with the address of ‘i’:
int i; int *ip = &i;
Note the use of the address operator (see Pointer Operators), used to get the memory address of a variable. After you declare a pointer, you do not use the indirection operator with the pointer's name when assigning it a new address to point to. On the contrary, that would change the value of the variable that the points to, not the value of the pointer itself. For example:
int i, j; int *ip = &i; /* ‘ip’ now holds the address of ‘i’. */ ip = &j; /* ‘ip’ now holds the address of ‘j’. */ *ip = &i; /* ‘j’ now holds the address of ‘i’. */
The value stored in a pointer is an integral number: a location within the computer's memory space. If you are so inclined, you can assign pointer values explicitly using literal integers, casting them to the appropriate pointer type. However, we do not recommend this practice unless you need to have extremely fine-tuned control over what is stored in memory, and you know exactly what you are doing. It would be all too easy to accidentally overwrite something that you did not intend to. Most uses of this technique are also non-portable.
It is important to note that declaring a pointer variable does not have the side effect of reserving any storage. If you do not initialize a pointer with the address of some other existing object, it points nowhere in particular and will likely make your program crash if you use it (formally, this kind of thing is called undefined behavior).
You can create a pointer to a union type just as you can a pointer to a primitive data type.
union numbers { int i; float f; }; union numbers foo = {4}; union numbers *number_ptr = &foo;
That example creates a new union type, union numbers
, and declares (and initializes the first member of) a variable of that type named foo
. Finally, it declares a pointer to the type union numbers
, and gives it the address of foo
.
You can access the members of a union variable through a pointer, but you can't use the regular member access operator anymore. Instead, you have to use the indirect member access operator (see Member Access Expressions). Continuing with the previous example, the following example will change the value of the first member of foo
:
number_ptr -> i = 450;
Now the i
member in foo
is 450.
You can create a pointer to a structure type just as you can a pointer to a primitive data type.
struct fish { float length, weight; }; struct fish salmon = {4.3, 5.8}; struct fish *fish_ptr = &salmon;
That example creates a new structure type, struct fish
, and declares (and initializes) a variable of that type named salmon
. Finally, it declares a pointer to the type struct fish
, and gives it the address of salmon
.
You can access the members of a structure variable through a pointer, but you can't use the regular member access operator anymore. Instead, you have to use the indirect member access operator (see Member Access Expressions). Continuing with the previous example, the following example will change the values of the members of salmon
:
fish_ptr -> length = 5.1; fish_ptr -> weight = 6.2;
Now the length
and width
members in salmon
are 5.1 and 6.2, respectively.
You can define structures, unions, and enumerations without listing their members (or values, in the case of enumerations). Doing so results in an incomplete type. You can't declare variables of incomplete types, but you can work with pointers to those types.
struct point;
At some time later in your program you will want to complete the type. You do this by defining it as you usually would:
struct point { int x, y; };
This technique is commonly used to for linked lists:
struct singly_linked_list { struct singly_linked_list *next; int x; /* other members here perhaps */ }; struct singly_linked_list *list_head;
There are two type qualifiers that you can prepend to your variable declarations which change how the variables may be accessed: const
and volatile
.
const
causes the variable to be read-only; after initialization, its value may not be changed.
const float pi = 3.14159f;
In addition to helping to prevent accidental value changes, declaring variables with const
can aid the compiler in code optimization.
volatile
tells the compiler that the variable is explicitly changeable, and seemingly useless accesses of the variable (for instance, via pointers) should not be optimized away. You might use volatile
variables to store data that is updated via callback functions or signal handlers. Sequence Points and Signal Delivery.
volatile float currentTemperature = 40.0;
There are four storage class specifiers that you can prepend to your variable declarations which change how the variables are stored in memory: auto
, extern
,register
, and static
.
You use auto
for variables which are local to a function, and whose values should be discarded upon return from the function in which they are declared. This is the default behavior for variables declared within functions.
void foo (int value) { auto int x = value; ... return; }
register
is nearly identical in purpose to auto
, except that it also suggests to the compiler that the variable will be heavily used, and, if possible, should be stored in a register. You cannot use the address-of operator to obtain the address of a variable declared with register
. This means that you cannot refer to the elements of an array declared with storage class register
. In fact the only thing you can do with such an array is measure its size withsizeof
. GCC normally makes good choices about which values to hold in registers, and so register
is not often used.
static
is essentially the opposite of auto
: when applied to variables within a function or block, these variables will retain their value even when the function or block is finished. This is known as static storage duration.
int sum (int x) { static int sumSoFar = 0; sumSoFar = sumSoFar + x; return sumSoFar; }
You can also declare variables (or functions) at the top level (that is, not inside a function) to be static
; such variables are visible (global) to the current source file (but not other source files). This gives an unfortunate double meaning to static
; this second meaning is known as static linkage. Two functions or variables having static linkage in separate files are entirely separate; neither is visible outside the file in which it is declared.
Uninitialized variables that are declared as extern
are given default values of 0
, 0.0
, or NULL
, depending on the type. Uninitialized variables that are declared as auto
or register
(including the default usage of auto
) are left uninitialized, and hence should not be assumed to hold any particular value.
extern
is useful for declaring variables that you want to be visible to all source files that are linked into your project. You cannot initialize a variable in an extern
declaration, as no space is actually allocated during the declaration. You must make both an extern
declaration (typically in a header file that is included by the other source files which need to access the variable) and a non-extern
declaration which is where space is actually allocated to store the variable. The extern
declaration may be repeated multiple times.
extern int numberOfClients; ... int numberOfClients = 0;
See Program Structure and Scope, for related information.
Sometimes it is convenient to give a new name to a type. You can do this using the typedef
statement. See The typedef Statement, for more information.
An expression consists of at least one operand and zero or more operators. Operands typed objects such as constants, variables, and function calls that return values. Here are some examples:
47
2 + 2
cosine(3.14159) /* We presume this returns a floating point value. */
Parentheses group subexpressions:
( 2 * ( ( 3 + 10 ) - ( 2 * 6 ) ) )
Innermost expressions are evaluated first. In the above example, 3 + 10
and 2 * 6
evaluate to 13
and 12
, respectively. Then 12
is subtracted from 13
, resulting in 1
. Finally, 1
is multiplied by 2
, resulting in 2
. The outermost parentheses are completely optional.
An operator specifies an operation to be performed on its operand(s). Operators may have one, two, or three operands, depending on the operator.
Assignment operators store values in variables. C provides several variations of assignment operators.
The standard assignment operator =
simply stores the value of its right operand in the variable specified by its left operand. As with all assignment operators, the left operand (commonly referred to as the “lvalue”) cannot be a literal or constant value.
int x = 10; float y = 45.12 + 2.0; int z = (2 * (3 + function () )); struct foo { int bar; int baz; } quux = {3, 4, 5};
Note that, unlike the other assignment operators described below, you can use the plain assignment operator to store values of a structure type.
Compound assignment operators perform an operation involving both the left and right operands, and then assign the resulting expression to the left operand. Here is a list of the compound assignment operators, and a brief description of what they do:
+=
Adds the two operands together, and then assign the result of the addition to the left operand.
-=
Subtract the right operand from the left operand, and then assign the result of the subtraction to the left operand.
*=
Multiply the two operands together, and then assign the result of the multiplication to the left operand.
/=
Divide the left operand by the right operand, and assign the result of the division to the left operand.
%=
Perform modular division on the two operands, and assign the result of the division to the left operand.
<<=
Perform a left shift operation on the left operand, shifting by the number of bits specified by the right operand, and assign the result of the shift to the left operand.
>>=
Perform a right shift operation on the left operand, shifting by the number of bits specified by the right operand, and assign the result of the shift to the left operand.
&=
Perform a bitwise conjunction operation on the two operands, and assign the result of the operation to the left operand.
^=
Performs a bitwise exclusive disjunction operation on the two operands, and assign the result of the operation to the left operand.
|=
Performs a bitwise inclusive disjunction operation on the two operands, and assign the result of the operation to the left operand.
Here is an example of using one of the compound assignment operators:
x += y;
Since there are no side effects wrought by evaluating the variable x
asn an lvalue, the above code produces the same result as:
x = x + y;
The increment operator ++
adds 1 to its operand. The operand must be a either a variable of one of the primitive data types, a pointer, or an enumeration variable. You can apply the increment operator either before or after the operand. Here are some examples:
char w = '1'; int x = 5; char y = 'B'; float z = 5.2; int *p = &x; x++; /*x
is now 6. */ ++y; /*y
is now `C' (on ASCII systems). */ ++w; /*y
is now the character `2' (not the value 2). */ z++; /*z
is now 6.2. */ ++p; /*p
is now&x
+sizeof(int)
. */
(Note that incrementing a pointer only makes sense if you have reason to believe that the new pointer value will be a valid memory address.)
A prefix increment adds 1 before the operand is evaluated. A postfix increment adds 1 after the operand is evaluated. In the previous examples, changing the position of the operator would make no difference. However, there are cases where it does make a difference:
int x = 5; printf ("%d \n", x++); /* Printx
and then increment it. */ /*x
is now equal to 6. */ printf ("%d \n", ++x); /* Incrementx
and then print it. */
The output of the above example is:
5 7
Likewise, you can subtract 1 from an operand using the decrement operator:
int x = 5;
x--; /* x
is now 4. */
The concepts of prefix and postfix application apply here as with the increment operator.
C provides operators for standard arithmetic operations: addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division, along with modular division and negation. Usage of these operators is straightforward; here are some examples:
/* Addition. */
x = 5 + 3;
y = 10.23 + 37.332;
quux_pointer = foo_pointer + bar_pointer;
/* Subtraction. */
x = 5 - 3;
y = 57.223 - 10.903;
quux_pointer = foo_pointer - bar_pointer;
You can add and subtract memory pointers, but you cannot multiply or divide them.
/* Multiplication. */
x = 5 * 3;
y = 47.4 * 1.001;
/* Division. */
x = 5 / 3;
y = 940.0 / 20.2;
Integer division of positive values truncates towards zero, so 5/3 is 1. However, if either operand is negative, the direction of rounding is implementation-defined. Signed Integer Division for information about overflow in signed integer division.
You use the modulus operator %
to obtain the remainder produced by dividing its two operands. You put the operands on either side of the operator, and it does matter which operand goes on which side: 3 % 5
and 5 % 3
do not have the same result. The operands must be expressions of a primitive data type.
/* Modular division. */
x = 5 % 3;
y = 74 % 47;
Modular division returns the remainder produced after performing integer division on the two operands. The operands must be of a primitive integer type.
/* Negation. */
int x = -5;
float y = -3.14159;
If the operand you use with the negative operator is of an unsigned data type, then the result cannot negative, but rather is the maximum value of the unsigned data type, minus the value of the operand.
Many systems use twos-complement arithmetic, and on such systems the most negative value a signed type can hold is further away from zero than the most positive value. For example, on one platform, this program:
#include <limits.h> #include <stdio.h> int main (int argc, char *argv[]) { int x; x = INT_MAX; printf("INT_MAX = %d\n", x); x = INT_MIN; printf("INT_MIN = %d\n", x); x = -x; printf("-INT_MIN = %d\n", x); return 0; }
Produces this output:
INT_MAX = 2147483647 INT_MIN = -2147483648 -INT_MIN = -2147483648
Trivially, you can also apply a positive operator to a numeric expression:
int x = +42;
Numeric values are assumed to be positive unless explicitly made negative, so this operator has no effect on program operation.
As a GNU extension, you can use the complex conjugation operator ~
to perform complex conjugation on its operand — that is, it reverses the sign of its imaginary component. The operand must be an expression of a complex number type. Here is an example:
__complex__ int x = 5 + 17i; printf ("%d \n", (x * ~x));
Since an imaginary number (a + bi) multiplied by its conjugate is equal to a^2 + b^2, the above printf
statement will print 314, which is equal to 25 + 289.
You use the comparison operators to determine how two operands relate to each other: are they equal to each other, is one larger than the other, is one smaller than the other, and so on. When you use any of the comparison operators, the result is either 1 or 0, meaning true or false, respectively.
(In the following code examples, the variables x
and y
stand for any two expressions of arithmetic types, or pointers.)
The equal-to operator ==
tests its two operands for equality. The result is 1 if the operands are equal, and 0 if the operands are not equal.
if (x == y) puts (``x is equal to y''); else puts (``x is not equal to y'');
The not-equal-to operator !=
tests its two operands for inequality. The result is 1 if the operands are not equal, and 0 if the operands are equal.
if (x != y) puts (``x is not equal to y''); else puts (``x is equal to y'');
Comparing floating-point values for exact equality or inequality can produce unexpected results. Real Number Types for more information.
You can compare function pointers for equality or inequality; the comparison tests if two function pointers point to the same function or not.
Beyond equality and inequality, there are operators you can use to test if one value is less than, greater than, less-than-or-equal-to, or greater-than-or-equal-to another value. Here are some code samples that exemplify usage of these operators:
if (x < y) puts (``x is less than y'');
if (x <= y) puts (``x is less than or equal to y'');
if (x > y) puts (``x is greater than y'');
if (x >= y) puts (``x is greater than or equal to y'');
Logical operators test the truth value of a pair of operands. Any nonzero expression is considered true in C, while an expression that evaluates to zero is considered false.
The logical conjunction operator &&
tests if two expressions are both true. If the first expression is false, then the second expression is not evaluated.
if ((x == 5) && (y == 10)) printf (``x is 5 and y is 10'');
The logical conjunction operator ||
tests if at least one of two expressions it true. If the first expression is true, then the second expression is not evaluated.
if ((x == 5) || (y == 10)) printf (``x is 5 or y is 10'');
You can prepend a logical expression with a negation operator !
to flip the truth value:
if (!(x == 5)) printf (``x is not 5'');
Since the second operand in a logical expression pair is not necessarily evaluated, you can write code with perhaps unintuitive results:
if (foo && x++) bar();
If foo
is ever zero, then not only would bar
not be called, but x
would not be incremented. If you intend to increment x
regardless of the value of foo
, you should do so outside of the conjunction expression.
You use the left-shift operator <<
to shift its first operand's bits to the left. The second operand denotes the number of bit places to shift. Bits shifted off the left side of the value are discarded; new bits added on the right side will all be 0.
x = 47; /* 47 is 00101111 in binary. */ x << 1; /* 00101111 << 1 is 01011110. */
Similarly, you use the right-shift operator >>
to shift its first operand's bits to the right. Bits shifted off the right side are discarded; new bits added on the left side are usually 0, but if the first operand is a signed negative value, then the added bits will be either 0 or whatever value was previously in the leftmost bit position.
x = 47; /* 47 is 00101111 in binary. */ x >> 1; /* 00101111 >> 1 is 00010111. */
For both <<
and >>
, if the second operand is greater than the bit-width of the first operand, or the second operand is negative, the behavior is undefined.
You can use the shift operators to perform a variety of interesting hacks. For example, given a date with the day of the month numbered as d
, the month numbered as m
, and the year y
, you can store the entire date in a single number x
:
int d = 12; int m = 6; int y = 1983; int x = ((y << 4) + m) << 5) + d;
You can then extract the original day, month, and year out of x
using a combination of shift operators and modular division:
d = x % 32; m = (x >> 5) % 16; y = x >> 9;
C provides operators for performing bitwise conjunction, inclusive disjunction, exclusive disjunction, and negation (complement).
Biwise conjunction examines each bit in its two operands, and when two corresponding bits are both 1, the resulting bit is 1. All other resulting bits are 0. Here is an example of how this works, using binary numbers:
11001001 & 10011011 = 10001001
Bitwise inclusive disjunction examines each bit in its two operands, and when two corresponding bits are both 0, the resulting bit is 0. All other resulting bits are 1.
11001001 | 10011011 = 11011011
Bitwise exclusive disjunction examines each bit in its two operands, and when two corresponding bits are different, the resulting bit is 1. All other resulting bits are 0.
11001001 ^ 10011011 = 01010000
Bitwise negation reverses each bit in its operand:
~11001001 = 00110110
In C, you can only use these operators with operands of an integer (or character) type, and for maximum portability, you should only use the bitwise negation operator with unsigned integer types. Here are some examples of using these operators in C code:
unsigned int foo = 42; unsigned int bar = 57; unsigned int quux; quux = foo & bar; quux = foo | bar; quux = foo ^ bar; quux = ~foo;
You can use the address operator &
to obtain the memory address of an object.
int x = 5; int *pointer_to_x = &x;
It is not necessary to use this operator to obtain the address of a function, although you can:
extern int foo (void); int (*fp1) (void) = foo; /* fp1 points to foo */ int (*fp2) (void) = &foo; /* fp1 also points to foo */
Function pointers and data pointers are not compatible, in the sense that you cannot expect to store the address of a function into a data pointer, and then copy that into a function pointer and call it successfully. It might work on some systems, but it's not a portable technique.
As a GNU extension to C89, you can also obtain the address of a label with the label address operator &&
. The result is a void*
pointer which can be used with goto
. See The goto Statement.
Given a memory address stored in a pointer, you can use the indirection operator *
to obtain the value stored at the address. (This is called dereferencingthe pointer.)
int x = 5; int y; int *ptr; ptr = &x; /*ptr
now holds the address ofx
. */ y = *ptr; /*y
gets the value stored at the address stored inptr
. */
Avoid using dereferencing pointers that have not been initialized to a known memory location.
You can use the sizeof
operator to obtain the size (in bytes) of the data type of its operand. The operand may be an actual type specifier (such as int
orfloat
), as well as any valid expression. When the operand is a type name, it must be enclosed in parentheses. Here are some examples:
size_t a = sizeof(int); size_t b = sizeof(float); size_t c = sizeof(5); size_t d = sizeof(5.143); size_t e = sizeof a;
The result of the sizeof
operator is of a type called size_t
, which is defined in the header file <stddef.h>
. size_t
is an unsigned integer type, perhaps identical to unsigned int
or unsigned long int
; it varies from system to system.
The size_t
type is often a convenient type for a loop index, since it is guaranteed to be able to hold the number of elements in any array; this is not the case with int
, for example.
The sizeof
operator can be used to automatically compute the number of elements in an array:
#include <stddef.h> #include <stdio.h> static const int values[] = { 1, 2, 48, 681 }; #define ARRAYSIZE(x) (sizeof x/sizeof x[0]) int main (int argc, char *argv[]) { size_t i; for (i = 0; i < ARRAYSIZE(values); i++) { printf("%d\n", values[i]); } return 0; }
There are two cases where this technique does not work. The first is where the array element has zero size (GCC supports zero-sized structures as a GNU extension). The second is where the array is in fact a function parameter (see Function Parameters).
You can use a type cast to explicitly cause an expression to be of a specified data type. A type cast consists of a type specifier enclosed in parentheses, followed by an expression. To ensure proper casting, you should also enclose the expression that follows the type specifier in parentheses. Here is an example:
float x; int y = 7; int z = 3; x = (float) (y / z);
In that example, since y
and z
are both integers, integer division is performed, and even though x
is a floating-point variable, it receives the value 2. Explicitly casting the result of the division to float
does no good, because the computed value of y/z
is already 2.
To fix this problem, you need to convert one of the operands to a floating-point type before the division takes place:
float x; int y = 7; int z = 3; x = (y / (float)z);
Here, a floating-point value close to 2.333... is assigned to x
.
Type casting only works with scalar types (that is, integer, floating-point or pointer types). Therefore, this is not allowed:
struct fooTag { /* members ... */ };
struct fooTag foo;
unsigned char byteArray[8];
foo = (struct fooType) byteArray; /* Fail! */
You can access array elements by specifying the name of the array, and the array subscript (or index, or element number) enclosed in brackets. Here is an example, supposing an integer array called my_array
:
my_array[0] = 5;
The array subscript expression A[i]
is defined as being identical to the expression (*((A)+(i)))
. This means that many uses of an array name are equivalent to a pointer expression. It also means that you cannot subscript an array having the register
storage class.
A call to any function which returns a value is an expression.
int function(void); ... a = 10 + function();
You use the comma operator ,
to separate two (ostensibly related) expressions. For instance, the first expression might produce a value that is used by the second expression:
x++, y = x * x;
More commonly, the comma operator is used in for
statements, like this:
/* Using the comma operator in a for
statement. */
for (x = 1, y = 10; x <=10 && y >=1; x++, y--)
{
...
}
This lets you conveniently set, monitor, and modify multiple control expressions for the for
statement.
A comma is also used to separate function parameters; however, this is not the comma operator in action. In fact, if the comma operator is used as we have discussed here in a function call, then the compiler will interpret that as calling the function with an extra parameter.
If you want to use the comma operator in a function argument, you need to put parentheses around it. That's because commas in a function argument list have a different meaning: they separate arguments. Thus,
foo (x, y=47, x, z);
is interpreted as a function call with four arguments, but
foo (x, (y=47, x), z);
is a function call with just three arguments. (The second argument is (y=47, x)
.)
You can use the member access operator .
to access the members of a structure or union variable. You put the name of the structure variable on the left side of the operator, and the name of the member on the right side.
struct point { int x, y; }; struct point first_point; first_point.x = 0; first_point.y = 5;
You can also access the members of a structure or union variable via a pointer by using the indirect member access operator ->
. x->y
is equivalent to (*x).y
.
struct fish { int length, weight; }; struct fish salmon; struct fish *fish_pointer = &salmon; fish_pointer->length = 3; fish_pointer->weight = 9;
See Pointers.
You use the conditional operator to cause the entire conditional expression to evaluate to either its second or its third operand, based on the truth value of its first operand. Here's an example:
a ? b : c
If expression a
is true, then expression b
is evaluated and the result is the value of b
. Otherwise, expression c
is evaluated and the result is c
.
Expressions b
and c
must be compatible. That is, they must both be
struct
or union
typesAlternatively, one operand is a pointer and the other is a void*
pointer.
Here is an example
a = (x == 5) ? y : z;
Here, if x
equals 5, then a
will receive the value of y
. Otherwise, a
will receive the value of z
. This can be considered a shorthand method for writing a simple if
...else
statement. The following example will accomplish the same task as the previous one:
if (x == 5) a = y; else a = z;
If the first operand of the conditional operator is true, then the third operand is never evaluated. Similarly, if the first operand is false, then the second operand is never evaluated. The first operand is always evaluated.
As a GNU C extension, you can build an expression using compound statement enclosed in parentheses. This allows you to included loops, switches, and local variables within an expression.
Recall that a compound statement (also known as a block) is a sequence of statements surrounded by braces. In this construct, parentheses go around the braces. Here is an example:
({ int y = function (); int z; if (y > 0) z = y; else z = - y; z; })
That is a valid (though slightly more complex than necessary) expression for the absolute value of function ()
.
The last thing in the compound statement should be an expression followed by a semicolon; the value of this subexpression serves as the value of the entire construct. (If you use some other kind of statement last within the braces, the construct has type void
, and thus effectively no value.)
This feature is especially useful in making macro definitions “safe” (so that they evaluate each operand exactly once). For example, the “maximum” function is commonly defined as a macro in standard C as follows:
#define max(a,b) ((a) > (b) ? (a) : (b))
But this definition computes either a
or b
twice, with bad results if the operand has side effects. In GNU C, if you know the type of the operands (here let's assume int
), you can define the macro safely as follows:
#define maxint(a,b) \ ({int _a = (a), _b = (b); _a > _b ? _a : _b; })
If you don't know the type of the operand, you can still do this, but you must use typeof
expressions or type naming.
Embedded statements are not allowed in constant expressions, such as the value of an enumeration constant, the width of a bit field, or the initial value of a static variable.
When an expression contains multiple operators, such as a + b * f()
, the operators are grouped based on rules of precedence. For instance, the meaning of that expression is to call the function f
with no arguments, multiply the result by b
, then add that result to a
. That's what the C rules of operator precedence determine for this expression.
The following is a list of types of expressions, presented in order of highest precedence first. Sometimes two or more operators have equal precedence; all those operators are applied from left to right unless stated otherwise.
sizeof
expressions. When several unary operators are consecutive, the later ones are nested within the earlier ones: !-x
means !(-x)
.?:
). When used as subexpressions, these are evaluated right to left.The above list is somewhat dry and is apparently straightforward, but it does hide some pitfalls. Take this example:
foo = *p++;
Here p
is incremented as a side effect of the expression, but foo
takes the value of *(p++)
rather than (*p)++
, since the unary operators bind right to left. There are other examples of potential surprises lurking behind the C precedence table. For this reason if there is the slightest risk of the reader misunderstanding the meaning of the program, you should use parentheses to make your meaning clear.
In C you cannot assume that multiple subexpressions are evaluated in the order that seems natural. For instance, consider the expression ++a * f()
. Does this increment a
before or after calling the function f
? The compiler could do it in either order, so you cannot make assumptions.
This manual explains the semantics of the C language in the abstract. However, an actual compiler translates source code into specific actions in an actual computer, and may re-order operations for the sake of efficiency. The correspondence between the program you write and the things the computer actually does are specified in terms of side effects and sequence points.
A side effect is one of the following:
volatile
objectThese are essentially the externally-visible effects of running a program. They are called side effects because they are effects of expression evalation beyond the expression's actual resulting value.
The compiler is allowed to perform the operations of your program in an order different to the order implied by the source of your program, provided that in the end all the necessary side effects actually take place. The compiler is also allowed to entirely omit some operations; for example it's allowed to skip evaluating part of an expression if it can be certain that the value is not used and evaluating that part of the expression won't produce any needed side effects.
Another requirement on the compiler is that side effects should take place in the correct order. In order to provide this without over-constraining the compiler, the C89 and C90 standards specfy a list of sequence points. A sequence point is one of the following:
&&
||
,
a ? b : c
;
)if
or switch
statementwhile
or do
statementfor
statementstrftime
or the printf
and scanf
famlies of functions).qsort
)At a sequence point, all the side effects of previous expression evaluations must be complete, and no side effects of later evaluations may have taken place.
This may seem a little hard to grasp, but there is another way to consider this. Imagine you wrote a library (some of whose functions are external and perhaps others not) and compiled it, allowing someone else to call one of your functions from their code. The definitions above ensure that, at the time they call your function, the data they pass in has values which are consistent with the behaviour specified by the abstract machine, and any data returned by your function has a state which is also consistent with the abstract machine. This includes data accessible via pointers (i.e. not just function parameters and identifiers with external linkage).
The above is a slight simplification, since compilers exist that perform whole-program optimisation at link time. Importantly however, although they might perform optimisations, the visible side effects of the program must be the same as if they were produced by the abstract machine.
The code fragment
i = i + 1;
is quite normal and no doubt occurs in many programs. However, the quite similar code fragment
i = ++i + 1;
is a little harder to understand; what is the final value of i
? The C standards (both C89 and C99) both forbid this construct in conforming programs.
Between two sequence points,
The first of these two conditions forbids expressions like foo(x=2, ++x)
. The second condition forbids expressions like a[i++] = i
.
int x=0; foo(++x, ++x)
x
twice before argument evaluation is complete.
int x=0; bar((++x,++x))
bar
takes one argument (the value 2 is passed here), and there is a sequence point at the comma operator.
*p++ || *p++
||
.
int x = 1, y = x++;
x
.
x=2; x++;
if (x++ > MAX) x = 0;
if
3.
(x=y) ? ++x : x--;
?
, and only one of the two following expressions is evaluated.
int *p=malloc(sizeof(*p)), *q=p; *p=foo(); bar((*p)++,(*q)++);
p
is being modified twice before the evaluation of the arguments to
bar
is complete. The fact that this is done once via
p
and once via
q
is irrelevant, since they both point to the same object.
Let's go back to the example we used to introduce the problem of the order of evaluation, ++a * f()
. Suppose the code actually looks like this:
static int a = 1; static int f (void) { a = 100; return 3; } int foo (void) { return ++a * f(); }
Is this code allowed in a standard-conforming program? Although the expression in foo
modifies a
twice, this is not a problem. Let's look at the two possible cases.
f()
is evaluated first
f
returns a value other than void, it must contain a
return
statement. Therefore, there is a sequence point at the end of the return expression. That comes between the modification to
a
that
f
makes and the evaluation of the left operand.
++a
is evaluated first
a
is incremented. Then the arguments to
f
are evaluated (there are zero of them). Then there is a sequence point before
f
is actually called.
So, we see that our program is standard-conforming. Notice that the above argument does not actually depend on the details of the body of the function f
. It only depends on the function containing something ending in a sequence point – in our example this is a return statement, but an expression statement or a full declarator would do just as well.
However, the result of executing this code depends on the order of evaluation of the operands of *
. If the left-hand operand is evaluated first, foo
returns 6. Otherwise, it returns 303. The C standard does not specify in which order the operands should be evaluated, and also does not require an implementation either to document the order or even to stick to one order. The effect of this code is unspecified, meaning that one of several specific things will happen, but the C standards do not say which.
Singals are mainly documented in the GNU C Library manual rather than this document, even though the C standards consider the compiler and the C library together to be “the implementation”.
When a signal is received, this will happen between sequence points. Side effects on volatile
objects prior to the previous sequence point will have occurred, but other updates may not have occurred yet. This even applies to straight assignments, such as x=0;
, because the code generated for that statement may require more than one instruction, meaning that it can be interrupted part-way through by the delivery of a signal.
The C standard is quite restrictive about what data access can occur within a signal handler. They can of course use auto
variables, but in terms of reading or writing other objects, they must be volatile sig_atomic_t
. The volatile
type qualifier ensures that access to the variable in the other parts of the program doesn't span sequence points and the use of the sig_atomic_t
type ensures that changes to the variable are atomic with respect to signal delivery.
The POSIX standard also allows a small number of library functions to be called from a signal handler. These functions are referred to as the set of async-signal-safe functions. If your program is intended to run on a POSIX system but not on other systems, you can safely call these from your signal handler too.
You write statements to cause actions and to control flow within your programs. You can also write statements that do not do anything at all, or do things that are uselessly trivial.
You can use labels to identify a section of source code for use with a later goto
(see The goto Statement). A label consists of an identifier (such as those used for variable names) followed by a colon. Here is an example:
treet:
You should be aware that label names do not interfere with other identifier names:
int treet = 5; /*treet
the variable. */ treet: /*treet
the label. */
The ISO C standard mandates that a label must be followed by at least one statement, possibly a null statement (see The Null Statement). GCC will compile code that does not meet this requirement, but be aware that if you violate it, your code may have portability issues.
You can turn any expression into a statement by adding a semicolon to the end of the expression. Here are some examples:
5; 2 + 2; 10 >= 9;
In each of those, all that happens is that each expression is evaluated. However, they are useless because they do not store a value anywhere, nor do they actually do anything, other than the evaluation itself. The compiler is free to ignore such statements.
Expression statements are only useful when they have some kind of side effect, such as storing a value, calling a function, or (this is esoteric) causing a fault in the program. Here are some more useful examples:
x++; y = x + 25; puts ("Hello, user!"); *cucumber;
The last of those statements, *cucumber;
, could potentially cause a fault in the program if the value of cucumber
is both not a valid pointer and has been declared as volatile
.
if
StatementYou can use the if
statement to conditionally execute part of your program, based on the truth value of a given expression. Here is the general form of anif
statement:
if (test) then-statement else else-statement
If test evaluates to true, then then-statement is executed and else-statement is not. If test evaluates to false, then else-statement is executed and then-statement is not. The else
clause is optional.
Here is an actual example:
if (x == 10) puts ("x is 10");
If x == 10
evaluates to true, then the statement puts ("x is 10");
is executed. If x == 10
evaluates to false, then the statement puts ("x is 10");
is not executed.
Here is an example using else
:
if (x == 10) puts ("x is 10"); else puts ("x is not 10");
You can use a series of if
statements to test for multiple conditions:
if (x == 1) puts ("x is 1"); else if (x == 2) puts ("x is 2"); else if (x == 3) puts ("x is 3"); else puts ("x is something else");
This function calculates and displays the date of Easter for the given year y
:
void easterDate (int y) { int n = 0; int g = (y % 19) + 1; int c = (y / 100) + 1; int x = ((3 * c) / 4) - 12; int z = (((8 * c) + 5) / 25) - 5; int d = ((5 * y) / 4) - x - 10; int e = ((11 * g) + 20 + z - x) % 30; if (((e == 25) && (g > 11)) || (e == 24)) e++; n = 44 - e; if (n < 21) n += 30; n = n + 7 - ((d + n) % 7); if (n > 31) printf ("Easter: %d April %d", n - 31, y); else printf ("Easter: %d March %d", n, y); }
switch
StatementYou can use the switch
statement to compare one expression with others, and then execute a series of sub-statements based on the result of the comparisons. Here is the general form of a switch
statement:
switch (test) { case compare-1: if-equal-statement-1 case compare-2: if-equal-statement-2 ... default: default-statement }
The switch
statement compares test to each of the compare expressions, until it finds one that is equal to test. Then, the statements following the successful case are executed. All of the expressions compared must be of an integer type, and the compare-N expressions must be of a constant integer type (e.g., a literal integer or an expression built of literal integers).
Optionally, you can specify a default case. If test doesn't match any of the specific cases listed prior to the default case, then the statements for the default case are executed. Traditionally, the default case is put after the specific cases, but that isn't required.
switch (x) { case 0: puts ("x is 0"); break; case 1: puts ("x is 1"); break; default: puts ("x is something else"); break; }
Notice the usage of the break
statement in each of the cases. This is because, once a matching case is found, not only are its statements executed, but so are the statements for all following cases:
int x = 0; switch (x) { case 0: puts ("x is 0"); case 1: puts ("x is 1"); default: puts ("x is something else"); }
The output of that example is:
x is 0 x is 1 x is something else
This is often not desired. Including a break
statement at the end of each case redirects program flow to after the switch
statement.
As a GNU C extension, you can also specify a range of consecutive integer values in a single case
label, like this:
case low ... high:
This has the same effect as the corresponding number of individual case
labels, one for each integer value from low to high, inclusive.
This feature is especially useful for ranges of ASCII character codes:
case 'A' ... 'Z':
Be careful to include spaces around the ...
; otherwise it may be parsed incorrectly when you use it with integer values. For example, write this:
case 1 ... 5:
instead of this:
case 1...5:
It is common to use a switch
statement to handle various possible values of errno
. In this case a portable program should watch out for the possibility that two macros for errno
values in fact have the same value, for example EWOULDBLOCK
and EAGAIN
.
while
StatementThe while
statement is a loop statement with an exit test at the beginning of the loop. Here is the general form of the while
statement:
while (test) statement
The while
statement first evaluates test. If test evaluates to true, statement is executed, and then test is evaluated again. statement continues to execute repeatedly as long as test is true after each execution of statement.
This example prints the integers from zero through nine:
int counter = 0; while (counter < 10) printf ("%d ", counter++);
A break
statement can also cause a while
loop to exit.
do
StatementThe do
statement is a loop statement with an exit test at the end of the loop. Here is the general form of the do
statement:
do statement while (test);
The do
statement first executes statement. After that, it evaluates test. If test is true, then statement is executed again. statement continues to execute repeatedly as long as test is true after each execution of statement.
This example also prints the integers from zero through nine:
int x = 0; do printf ("%d ", x++); while (x < 10);
A break
statement can also cause a do
loop to exit.
for
StatementThe for
statement is a loop statement whose structure allows easy variable initialization, expression testing, and variable modification. It is very convenient for making counter-controlled loops. Here is the general form of the for
statement:
for (initialize; test; step) statement
The for
statement first evaluates the expression initialize. Then it evaluates the expression test. If test is false, then the loop ends and program control resumes after statement. Otherwise, if test is true, then statement is executed. Finally, step is evaluated, and the next iteration of the loop begins with evaluating test again.
Most often, initialize assigns values to one or more variables, which are generally used as counters, test compares those variables to a predefined expression, and step modifies those variables' values. Here is another example that prints the integers from zero through nine:
int x; for (x = 0; x < 10; x++) printf ("%d ", x);
First, it evaluates initialize, which assigns x
the value 0. Then, as long as x
is less than 10, the value of x
is printed (in the body of the loop). Then x
is incremented in the step clause and the test re-evaluated.
All three of the expressions in a for
statement are optional, and any combination of the three is valid. Since the first expression is evaluated only once, it is perhaps the most commonly omitted expression. You could also write the above example as:
int x = 1; for (; x <= 10; x++) printf ("%d ", x);
In this example, x
receives its value prior to the beginning of the for
statement.
If you leave out the test expression, then the for
statement is an infinite loop (unless you put a break
or goto
statement somewhere in statement). This is like using 1
as test; it is never false.
This for
statement starts printing numbers at 1 and then continues indefinitely, always printing x
incremented by 1:
for (x = 1; ; x++) printf ("%d ", x);
If you leave out the step expression, then no progress is made toward completing the loop—at least not as is normally expected with a for
statement.
This example prints the number 1 over and over, indefinitely:
for (x = 1; x <= 10;) printf ("%d ", x);
Perhaps confusingly, you cannot use the comma operator (see The Comma Operator) for monitoring and modifying multiple variables in a for
statement, because as usual the comma operator discards the result of its left operand. This loop:
int x, y; for (x = 1, y = 10; x <= 10, y >= 1; x+=2, y--) printf ("%d %d\n", x, y);
Outputs:
1 10 3 9 5 8 7 7 9 6 11 5 13 4 15 3 17 2 19 1
If you need to test two conditions, you will need to use the &&
operator:
int x, y; for (x = 1, y = 10; x <= 10 && y >= 1; x+=2, y--) printf ("%d %d\n", x, y);
A break
statement can also cause a for
loop to exit.
Here is an example of a function that computes the summation of squares, given a starting integer to square and an ending integer to square:
int sum_of_squares (int start, int end) { int i, sum = 0; for (i = start; i <= end; i++) sum += i * i; return sum; }
A block is a set of zero or more statements enclosed in braces. Blocks are also known as compound statements. Often, a block is used as the body of an if
statement or a loop statement, to group statements together.
for (x = 1; x <= 10; x++) { printf ("x is %d\n", x); if ((x % 2) == 0) printf ("%d is even\n", x); else printf ("%d is odd\n", x); }
You can also put blocks inside other blocks:
for (x = 1; x <= 10; x++) { if ((x % 2) == 0) { printf ("x is %d\n", x); printf ("%d is even\n", x); } else { printf ("x is %d\n", x); printf ("%d is odd\n", x); } }
You can declare variables inside a block; such variables are local to that block. In C89, declarations must occur before other statements, and so sometimes it is useful to introduce a block simply for this purpose:
{
int x = 5;
printf ("%d\n", x);
}
printf ("%d\n", x); /* Compilation error! x
exists only
in the preceding block. */
The null statement is merely a semicolon alone.
;
A null statement does not do anything. It does not store a value anywhere. It does not cause time to pass during the execution of your program.
Most often, a null statement is used as the body of a loop statement, or as one or more of the expressions in a for
statement. Here is an example of a for
statement that uses the null statement as the body of the loop (and also calculates the integer square root of n
, just for fun):
for (i = 1; i*i < n; i++) ;
Here is another example that uses the null statement as the body of a for
loop and also produces output:
for (x = 1; x <= 5; printf ("x is now %d\n", x), x++) ;
A null statement is also sometimes used to follow a label that would otherwise be the last thing in a block.
goto
StatementYou can use the goto
statement to unconditionally jump to a different place in the program. Here is the general form of a goto
statement:
goto label;
You have to specify a label to jump to; when the goto
statement is executed, program control jumps to that label. See Labels. Here is an example:
goto end_of_program; ... end_of_program:
The label can be anywhere in the same function as the goto
statement that jumps to it, but a goto
statement cannot jump to a label in a different function.
You can use goto
statements to simulate loop statements, but we do not recommend it—it makes the program harder to read, and GCC cannot optimize it as well. You should use for
, while
, and do
statements instead of goto
statements, when possible.
As an extension, GCC allows a goto statement to jump to an address specified by a void*
variable. To make this work, you also need to take the address of a label by using the unary operator &&
(not &
). Here is a contrived example:
enum Play { ROCK=0, PAPER=1, SCISSORS=2 };
enum Result { WIN, LOSE, DRAW };
static enum Result turn (void)
{
const void * const jumptable[] = {&&rock, &&paper, &&scissors};
enum Play opp; /* opponent's play */
goto *jumptable[select_option (&opp)];
rock:
return opp == ROCK ? DRAW : (opp == PAPER ? LOSE : WIN);
paper:
return opp == ROCK ? WIN : (opp == PAPER ? DRAW : LOSE);
scissors:
return opp == ROCK ? LOSE : (opp == PAPER ? WIN : DRAW);
}
break
StatementYou can use the break
statement to terminate a while
, do
, for
, or switch
statement. Here is an example:
int x; for (x = 1; x <= 10; x++) { if (x == 8) break; else printf ("%d ", x); }
That example prints numbers from 1 to 7. When x
is incremented to 8, x == 8
is true, so the break
statement is executed, terminating the for
loop prematurely.
If you put a break
statement inside of a loop or switch
statement which itself is inside of a loop or switch
statement, the break
only terminates the innermost loop or switch
statement.
continue
StatementYou can use the continue
statement in loops to terminate an iteration of the loop and begin the next iteration. Here is an example:
for (x = 0; x < 100; x++) { if (x % 2 == 0) continue; else sum_of_odd_numbers + = x; }
If you put a continue
statement inside a loop which itself is inside a loop, then it affects only the innermost loop.
return
StatementYou can use the return
statement to end the execution of a function and return program control to the function that called it. Here is the general form of the return
statement:
return return-value;
return-value is an optional expression to return. If the function's return type is void
, then it is invalid to return an expression. You can, however, use the return
statement without a return value.
If the function's return type is not the same as the type of return-value, and automatic type conversion cannot be performed, then returning return-valueis invalid.
If the function's return type is not void
and no return value is specified, then the return
statement is valid unless the function is called in a context that requires a return value. For example:
x = cosine (y);
In that case, the function cosine
was called in a context that required a return value, so the value could be assigned to x
.
Even in contexts where a return value is not required, it is a bad idea for a non-void
function to omit the return value. With GCC, you can use the command line option -Wreturn-type
to issue a warning if you omit the return value in such functions.
Here are some examples of using the return
statement, in both a void
and non-void
function:
void print_plus_five (int x) { printf ("%d ", x + 5); return; }
int square_value (int x) { return x * x; }
typedef
StatementYou can use the typedef
statement to create new names for data types. Here is the general form of the typedef
statement:
typedef old-type-name new-type-name
old-type-name is the existing name for the type, and may consist of more than one token (e.g., unsigned long int
). new-type-name is the resulting new name for the type, and must be a single identifier. Creating this new name for the type does not cause the old name to cease to exist. Here are some examples:
typedef unsigned char byte_type; typedef double real_number_type;
In the case of custom data types, you can use typedef
to make a new name for the type while defining the type:
typedef struct fish { float weight; float length; float probability_of_being_caught; } fish_type;
To make a type definition of an array, you first provide the type of the element, and then establish the number of elements at the end of the type definition:
typedef char array_of_bytes [5]; array_of_bytes five_bytes = {0, 1, 2, 3, 4};
When selecting names for types, you should avoid ending your type names with a _t
suffix. The compiler will allow you to do this, but the POSIX standard reserves use of the _t
suffix for standard library type names.
You can write functions to separate parts of your program into distinct subprocedures. To write a function, you must at least create a function definition. It is a good idea also to have an explicit function declaration; you don't have to, but if you leave it out, then the default implicit declaration might not match the function itself, and you will get some compile-time warnings.
Every program requires at least one function, called main
. That is where the program's execution begins.
You write a function declaration to specify the name of a function, a list of parameters, and the function's return type. A function declaration ends with a semicolon. Here is the general form:
return-type function-name (parameter-list);
return-type indicates the data type of the value returned by the function. You can declare a function that doesn't return anything by using the return typevoid
.
function-name can be any valid identifier (see Identifiers).
parameter-list consists of zero or more parameters, separated by commas. A typical parameter consists of a data type and an optional name for the parameter. You can also declare a function that has a variable number of parameters (see Variable Length Parameter Lists), or no parameters using void
. Leaving out parameter-list entirely also indicates no parameters, but it is better to specify it explicitly with void
.
Here is an example of a function declaration with two parameters:
int foo (int, double);
If you include a name for a parameter, the name immediately follows the data type, like this:
int foo (int x, double y);
The parameter names can be any identifier (see Identifiers), and if you have more than one parameter, you can't use the same name more than once within a single declaration. The parameter names in the declaration need not match the names in the definition.
You should write the function declaration above the first use of the function. You can put it in a header file and use the #include
directive to include that function declaration in any source code files that use the function.
You write a function definition to specify what a function actually does. A function definition consists of information regarding the function's name, return type, and types and names of parameters, along with the body of the function. The function body is a series of statements enclosed in braces; in fact it is simply a block (see Blocks).
Here is the general form of a function definition:
return-type function-name (parameter-list) { function-body }
return-type and function-name are the same as what you use in the function declaration (see Function Declarations).
parameter-list is the same as the parameter list used in the function declaration (see Function Declarations), except you must include names for the parameters in a function definition.
Here is an simple example of a function definition—it takes two integers as its parameters and returns the sum of them as its return value:
int add_values (int x, int y) { return x + y; }
For compatibility with the original design of C, you can also specify the type of the function parameters after the closing parenthesis of the parameter list, like this:
int add_values (x, y) int x, int y; { return x + y; }
However, we strongly discourage this style of coding; it can cause subtle problems with type casting, among other problems.
You can call a function by using its name and supplying any needed parameters. Here is the general form of a function call:
function-name (parameters)
A function call can make up an entire statement, or it can be used as a subexpression. Here is an example of a standalone function call:
foo (5);
In that example, the function ‘foo’ is called with the parameter 5
.
Here is an example of a function call used as a subexpression:
a = square (5);
Supposing that the function ‘square’ squares its parameter, the above example assigns the value 25 to a
.
If a parameter takes more than one argument, you separate parameters with commas:
a = quux (5, 10);
Function parameters can be any expression—a literal value, a value stored in variable, an address in memory, or a more complex expression built by combining these.
Within the function body, the parameter is a local copy of the value passed into the function; you cannot change the value passed in by changing the local copy.
int x = 23;
foo (x);
...
/* Definition for function foo
. */
int foo (int a)
{
a = 2 * a;
return a;
}
In that example, even though the parameter a
is modified in the function ‘foo’, the variable x
that is passed to the function does not change. If you wish to use the function to change the original value of x
, then you would have to incorporate the function call into an assignment statement:
x = foo (x);
If the value that you pass to a function is a memory address (that is, a pointer), then you can access (and change) the data stored at the memory address. This achieves an effect similar to pass-by-reference in other languages, but is not the same: the memory address is simply a value, just like any other value, and cannot itself be changed. The difference between passing a pointer and passing an integer lies in what you can do using the value within the function.
Here is an example of calling a function with a pointer parameter:
void foo (int *x) { *x = *x + 42; } ... int a = 15; foo (&a);
The formal parameter for the function is of type pointer-to-int
, and we call the function by passing it the address of a variable of type int
. By dereferencing the pointer within the function body, we can both see and change the value stored in the address. The above changes the value of a
to ‘57’.
Even if you don't want to change the value stored in the address, passing the address of a variable rather than the variable itself can be useful if the variable type is large and you need to conserve memory space or limit the performance impact of parameter copying. For example:
struct foo { int x; float y; double z; }; void bar (const struct foo *a);
In this case, unless you are working on a computer with very large memory addresses, it will take less memory to pass a pointer to the structure than to pass an instance of the structure.
One type of parameter that is always passed as a pointer is any sort of array:
void foo (int a[]); ... int x[100]; foo (x);
In this example, calling the function foo
with the parameter a
does not copy the entire array into a new local parameter within foo
; rather, it passes x
as a pointer to the first element in x
. Be careful, though: within the function, you cannot use sizeof
to determine the size of the array x
—sizeof
instead tells you the size of the pointer x
. Indeed, the above code is equivalent to:
void foo (int *a); ... int x[100]; foo (x);
Explicitly specifying the length of the array in the parameter declaration will not help. If you really need to pass an array by value, you can wrap it in a struct
, though doing this will rarely be useful (passing a const
-qualified pointer is normally sufficient to indicate that the caller should not modify the array).
You can write a function that takes a variable number of arguments; these are called variadic functions. To do this, the function needs to have at least one parameter of a known data type, but the remaining parameters are optional, and can vary in both quantity and data type.
You list the initial parameters as normal, but then after that, use an ellipsis: ‘...’. Here is an example function prototype:
int add_multiple_values (int number, ...);
To work with the optional parameters in the function definition, you need to use macros that are defined in the library header file ‘<stdarg.h>’, so you must #include
that file. For a detailed description of these macros, see The GNU C Library manual's section on variadic functions.
Here is an example:
int add_multiple_values (int number, ...) { int counter, total = 0; /* Declare a variable of type ‘va_list’. */ va_list parameters; /* Call the ‘va_start’ function. */ va_start (parameters, number); for (counter = 0; counter < number; counter++) { /* Get the values of the optional parameters. */ total += va_arg (parameters, int); } /* End use of the ‘parameters’ variable. */ va_end (parameters); return total; }
To use optional parameters, you need to have a way to know how many there are. This can vary, so it can't be hard-coded, but if you don't know how many optional parameters you have, then you could have difficulty knowing when to stop using the ‘va_arg’ function. In the above example, the first parameter to the ‘add_multiple_values’ function, ‘number’, is the number of optional parameters actually passed. So, we might call the function like this:
sum = add_multiple_values (3, 12, 34, 190);
The first parameter indicates how many optional parameters follow it.
Also, note that you don't actually need to use ‘va_end’ function. In fact, with GCC it doesn't do anything at all. However, you might want to include it to maximize compatibility with other compilers.
See Variadic Functions.
You can also call a function identified by a pointer. The indirection operator *
is optional when doing this.
#include <stdio.h> void foo (int i) { printf ("foo %d!\n", i); } void bar (int i) { printf ("%d bar!\n", i); } void message (void (*func)(int), int times) { int j; for (j=0; j<times; ++j) func (j); /* (*func) (j); would be equivalent. */ } void example (int want_foo) { void (*pf)(int) = &bar; /* The & is optional. */ if (want_foo) pf = foo; message (pf, 5); }
main
FunctionEvery program requires at least one function, called ‘main’. This is where the program begins executing. You do not need to write a declaration or prototype for main
, but you do need to define it.
The return type for main
is always int
. You do not have to specify the return type for main
, but you can. However, you cannot specify that it has a return type other than int
.
In general, the return value from main
indicates the program's exit status. A value of zero or EXIT_SUCCESS indicates success and EXIT_FAILURE indicates an error. Otherwise, the significance of the value returned is implementation-defined.
Reaching the }
at the end of main
without a return, or executing a return
statement with no value (that is, return;
) are both equivalent. In C89, the effect of this is undefined, but in C99 the effect is equivalent to return 0;
.
You can write your main
function to have no parameters (that is, as int main (void)
, or to accept parameters from the command line. Here is a very simple main
function with no parameters:
int main (void) { puts ("Hi there!"); return 0; }
To accept command line parameters, you need to have two parameters in the main
function, int argc
followed by char *argv[]
. You can change the names of those parameters, but they must have those data types—int
and array of pointers to char
. argc
is the number of command line parameters, including the name of the program itself. argv
is an array of the parameters, as character strings. argv[0]
, the first element in the array, is the name of the program as typed at the command line4; any following array elements are the parameters that followed the name of the program.
Here is an example main
function that accepts command line parameters, and prints out what those parameters are:
int main (int argc, char *argv[]) { int counter; for (counter = 0; counter < argc; counter++) printf ("%s\n", argv[counter]); return 0; }
You can write a function that is recursive—a function that calls itself. Here is an example that computes the factorial of an integer:
int factorial (int x) { if (x < 1) return x; else return (x * factorial (x - 1)); }
Be careful that you do not write a function that is infinitely recursive. In the above example, once x
is 1, the recursion stops. However, in the following example, the recursion does not stop until the program is interrupted or runs out of memory:
int watermelon (int x) { return (watermelon (x)); }
Functions can also be indirectly recursive, of course.
You can define a function to be static if you want it to be callable only within the source file where it is defined:
static int foo (int x) { return x + 42; }
This is useful if you are building a reusable library of functions and need to include some subroutines that should not be callable by the end user.
Functions which are defined in this way are said to have static linkage. Unfortunately the static
keyword has multiple meanings; Storage Class Specifiers.
As a GNU C extension, you can define functions within other functions, a technique known as nesting functions.
Here is an example of a tail-recursive factorial function, defined using a nested function:
int factorial (int x) { int factorial_helper (int a, int b) { if (a < 1) { return b; } else { return factorial_helper ((a - 1), (a * b)); } } return factorial_helper (x, 1); }
Note that nested functions must be defined along with variable declarations at the beginning of a function, and all other statements follow.
Now that we have seen all of the fundamental elements of C programs, it's time to look at the big picture.
A C program may exist entirely within a single source file, but more commonly, any non-trivial program will consist of several custom header files and source files, and will also include and link with files from existing libraries.
By convention, header files (with a “.h” extension) contain variable and function declarations, and source files (with a “.c” extension) contain the corresponding definitions. Source files may also store declarations, if these declarations are not for objects which need to be seen by other files. However, header files almost certainly should not contain any definitions.
For example, if you write a function that computes square roots, and you wanted this function to be accessible to files other than where you define the function, then you would put the function declaration into a header file (with a “.h” file extension):
/* sqrt.h */
double
computeSqrt (double x);
This header file could be included by other source files which need to use your function, but do not need to know how it was implemented.
The implementation of the function would then go into a corresponding source file (with a “.c” file extension):
/* sqrt.c */
#include "sqrt.h"
double
computeSqrt (double x)
{
double result;
...
return result;
}
Scope refers to what parts of the program can “see” a declared object. A declared object can be visible only within a particular function, or within a particular file, or may be visible to an entire set of files by way of including header files and using extern
declarations.
Unless explicitly stated otherwise, declarations made at the top-level of a file (i.e., not within a function) are visible to the entire file, including from within functions, but are not visible outside of the file.
Declarations made within functions are visible only within those functions.
A declaration is not visible to declarations that came before it; for example:
int x = 5; int y = x + 10;
will work, but:
int x = y + 10; int y = 5;
will not.
See Storage Class Specifiers, for more information on changing the scope of declared objects. Also see Static Functions.
To conclude our description of C, here is a complete program written in C, consisting of both a C source file and a header file. This program is an expanded version of the quintessential “hello world” program, and serves as an example of how to format and structure C code for use in programs for FSF Project GNU. (You can always download the most recent version of this program, including sample makefiles and other examples of how to produce GNU software, from http://www.gnu.org/software/hello
.)
This program uses features of the preprocessor; for a description of preprocessor macros, see The C Preprocessor, available as part of the GCC documentation.
hello.c
/* hello.c -- print a greeting message and exit. Copyright (C) 1992, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2005, 2006, 2007 Free Software Foundation, Inc. This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 3, or (at your option) any later version. This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details. You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301, USA. */ #include <config.h> #include "system.h" /* String containing name the program is called with. */ const char *program_name; static const struct option longopts[] = { { "greeting", required_argument, NULL, 'g' }, { "help", no_argument, NULL, 'h' }, { "next-generation", no_argument, NULL, 'n' }, { "traditional", no_argument, NULL, 't' }, { "version", no_argument, NULL, 'v' }, { NULL, 0, NULL, 0 } }; static void print_help (void); static void print_version (void); int main (int argc, char *argv[]) { int optc; int t = 0, n = 0, lose = 0; const char *greeting = NULL; program_name = argv[0]; /* Set locale via LC_ALL. */ setlocale (LC_ALL, ""); #if ENABLE_NLS /* Set the text message domain. */ bindtextdomain (PACKAGE, LOCALEDIR); textdomain (PACKAGE); #endif /* Even exiting has subtleties. The /dev/full device on GNU/Linux can be used for testing whether writes are checked properly. For instance, hello >/dev/full should exit unsuccessfully. On exit, if any writes failed, change the exit status. This is implemented in the Gnulib module "closeout". */ atexit (close_stdout); while ((optc = getopt_long (argc, argv, "g:hntv", longopts, NULL)) != -1) switch (optc) { /* One goal here is having --help and --version exit immediately, per GNU coding standards. */ case 'v': print_version (); exit (EXIT_SUCCESS); break; case 'g': greeting = optarg; break; case 'h': print_help (); exit (EXIT_SUCCESS); break; case 'n': n = 1; break; case 't': t = 1; break; default: lose = 1; break; } if (lose || optind < argc) { /* Print error message and exit. */ if (optind < argc) fprintf (stderr, _("%s: extra operand: %s\n"), program_name, argv[optind]); fprintf (stderr, _("Try `%s --help' for more information.\n"), program_name); exit (EXIT_FAILURE); } /* Print greeting message and exit. */ if (t) printf (_("hello, world\n")); else if (n) /* TRANSLATORS: Use box drawing characters or other fancy stuff if your encoding (e.g., UTF-8) allows it. If done so add the following note, please: [Note: For best viewing results use a UTF-8 locale, please.] */ printf (_("\ +---------------+\n\ | Hello, world! |\n\ +---------------+\n\ ")); else { if (!greeting) greeting = _("Hello, world!"); puts (greeting); } exit (EXIT_SUCCESS); } /* Print help info. This long message is split into several pieces to help translators be able to align different blocks and identify the various pieces. */ static void print_help (void) { /* TRANSLATORS: --help output 1 (synopsis) no-wrap */ printf (_("\ Usage: %s [OPTION]...\n"), program_name); /* TRANSLATORS: --help output 2 (brief description) no-wrap */ fputs (_("\ Print a friendly, customizable greeting.\n"), stdout); puts (""); /* TRANSLATORS: --help output 3: options 1/2 no-wrap */ fputs (_("\ -h, --help display this help and exit\n\ -v, --version display version information and exit\n"), stdout); puts (""); /* TRANSLATORS: --help output 4: options 2/2 no-wrap */ fputs (_("\ -t, --traditional use traditional greeting format\n\ -n, --next-generation use next-generation greeting format\n\ -g, --greeting=TEXT use TEXT as the greeting message\n"), stdout); printf ("\n"); /* TRANSLATORS: --help output 5 (end) TRANSLATORS: the placeholder indicates the bug-reporting address for this application. Please add _another line_ with the address for translation bugs. no-wrap */ printf (_("\ Report bugs to <%s>.\n"), PACKAGE_BUGREPORT); } /* Print version and copyright information. */ static void print_version (void) { printf ("hello (GNU %s) %s\n", PACKAGE, VERSION); /* xgettext: no-wrap */ puts (""); /* It is important to separate the year from the rest of the message, as done here, to avoid having to retranslate the message when a new year comes around. */ printf (_("\ Copyright (C) %s Free Software Foundation, Inc.\n\ License GPLv3+: GNU GPL version 3 or later\ <http://gnu.org/licenses/gpl.html>\n\ This is free software: you are free to change and redistribute it.\n\ There is NO WARRANTY, to the extent permitted by law.\n"), "2007"); }
system.h
/* system.h: system-dependent declarations; include this first. Copyright (C) 1996, 2005, 2006, 2007 Free Software Foundation, Inc. This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 3, or (at your option) any later version. This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details. You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301, USA. */ #ifndef HELLO_SYSTEM_H #define HELLO_SYSTEM_H /* Assume ANSI C89 headers are available. */ #include <locale.h> #include <stdio.h> #include <stdlib.h> #include <string.h> /* Use POSIX headers. If they are not available, we use the substitute provided by gnulib. */ #include <getopt.h> #include <unistd.h> /* Internationalization. */ #include "gettext.h" #define _(str) gettext (str) #define N_(str) gettext_noop (str) /* Check for errors on write. */ #include "closeout.h" #endif /* HELLO_SYSTEM_H */
[This appendix, written principally by Paul Eggert, is from the GNU Autoconf manual. We thought that it would be helpful to include here. –TJR]
In practice many portable C programs assume that signed integer overflow wraps around reliably using two's complement arithmetic. Yet the C standard says that program behavior is undefined on overflow, and in a few cases C programs do not work on some modern implementations because their overflows do not wrap around as their authors expected. Conversely, in signed integer remainder, the C standard requires overflow behavior that is commonly not implemented.
In languages like C, unsigned integer overflow reliably wraps around; e.g., UINT_MAX + 1
yields zero. This is guaranteed by the C standard and is portable in practice, unless you specify aggressive, nonstandard optimization options suitable only for special applications.
In contrast, the C standard says that signed integer overflow leads to undefined behavior where a program can do anything, including dumping core or overrunning a buffer. The misbehavior can even precede the overflow. Such an overflow can occur during addition, subtraction, multiplication, division, and left shift.
Despite this requirement of the standard, many C programs assume that signed integer overflow silently wraps around modulo a power of two, using two's complement arithmetic, so long as you cast the resulting value to a signed integer type or store it into a signed integer variable. If you use conservative optimization flags, such programs are generally portable to the vast majority of modern platforms, with a few exceptions discussed later.
For historical reasons the C standard also allows implementations with ones' complement or signed magnitude arithmetic, but it is safe to assume two's complement nowadays.
Also, overflow can occur when converting an out-of-range value to a signed integer type. Here a standard implementation must define what happens, but this might include raising an exception. In practice all known implementations support silent wraparound in this case, so you need not worry about other possibilities.
There has long been a tension between what the C standard requires for signed integer overflow, and what C programs commonly assume. The standard allows aggressive optimizations based on assumptions that overflow never occurs, but many practical C programs rely on overflow wrapping around. These programs do not conform to the standard, but they commonly work in practice because compiler writers are understandably reluctant to implement optimizations that would break many programs, unless perhaps a user specifies aggressive optimization.
The C Standard says that if a program has signed integer overflow its behavior is undefined, and the undefined behavior can even precede the overflow. To take an extreme example:
if (password == expected_password) allow_superuser_privileges (); else if (counter++ == INT_MAX) abort (); else printf ("%d password mismatches\n", counter);
If the int
variable counter
equals INT_MAX
, counter++
must overflow and the behavior is undefined, so the C standard allows the compiler to optimize away the test against INT_MAX
and the abort
call. Worse, if an earlier bug in the program lets the compiler deduce that counter == INT_MAX
or that counter
previously overflowed, the C standard allows the compiler to optimize away the password test and generate code that allows superuser privileges unconditionally.
Despite this requirement by the standard, it has long been common for C code to assume wraparound arithmetic after signed overflow, and all known practical C implementations support some C idioms that assume wraparound signed arithmetic, even if the idioms do not conform strictly to the standard. If your code looks like the following examples it will almost surely work with real-world compilers.
Here is an example derived from the 7th Edition Unix implementation of atoi
(1979-01-10):
char *p; int f, n; ... while (*p >= '0' && *p <= '9') n = n * 10 + *p++ - '0'; return (f ? -n : n);
Even if the input string is in range, on most modern machines this has signed overflow when computing the most negative integer (the -n
overflows) or a value near an extreme integer (the first +
overflows).
Here is another example, derived from the 7th Edition implementation of rand
(1979-01-10). Here the programmer expects both multiplication and addition to wrap on overflow:
static long int randx = 1; ... randx = randx * 1103515245 + 12345; return (randx >> 16) & 077777;
In the following example, derived from the GNU C Library 2.5 implementation of mktime
(2006-09-09), the code assumes wraparound arithmetic in +
to detect signed overflow:
time_t t, t1, t2; int sec_requested, sec_adjustment; ... t1 = t + sec_requested; t2 = t1 + sec_adjustment; if (((t1 < t) != (sec_requested < 0)) | ((t2 < t1) != (sec_adjustment < 0))) return -1;
If your code looks like these examples, it is probably safe even though it does not strictly conform to the C standard. This might lead one to believe that one can generally assume wraparound on overflow, but that is not always true, as can be seen in the next section.
Compilers sometimes generate code that is incompatible with wraparound integer arithmetic. A simple example is an algebraic simplification: a compiler might translate (i * 2000) / 1000
to i * 2
because it assumes that i * 2000
does not overflow. The translation is not equivalent to the original when overflow occurs: e.g., in the typical case of 32-bit signed two's complement wraparound int
, if i
has type int
and value 1073742
, the original expression returns −2147483 but the optimized version returns the mathematically correct value 2147484.
More subtly, loop induction optimizations often exploit the undefined behavior of signed overflow. Consider the following contrived function sumc
:
int sumc (int lo, int hi) { int sum = 0; int i; for (i = lo; i <= hi; i++) sum ^= i * 53; return sum; }
To avoid multiplying by 53 each time through the loop, an optimizing compiler might internally transform sumc
to the equivalent of the following:
int transformed_sumc (int lo, int hi) { int sum = 0; int hic = hi * 53; int ic; for (ic = lo * 53; ic <= hic; ic += 53) sum ^= ic; return sum; }
This transformation is allowed by the C standard, but it is invalid for wraparound arithmetic when INT_MAX / 53 < hi
, because then the overflow in computing expressions like hi * 53
can cause the expression i <= hi
to yield a different value from the transformed expression ic <= hic
.
For this reason, compilers that use loop induction and similar techniques often do not support reliable wraparound arithmetic when a loop induction variable like ic
is involved. Since loop induction variables are generated by the compiler, and are not visible in the source code, it is not always trivial to say whether the problem affects your code.
Hardly any code actually depends on wraparound arithmetic in cases like these, so in practice these loop induction optimizations are almost always useful. However, edge cases in this area can cause problems. For example:
int j; for (j = 1; 0 < j; j *= 2) test (j);
Here, the loop attempts to iterate through all powers of 2 that int
can represent, but the C standard allows a compiler to optimize away the comparison and generate an infinite loop, under the argument that behavior is undefined on overflow. As of this writing this optimization is not done by any production version of GCC with -O2, but it might be performed by other compilers, or by more aggressive GCC optimization options, and the GCC developers have not decided whether it will continue to work with GCC and -O2.
Ideally the safest approach is to avoid signed integer overflow entirely. For example, instead of multiplying two signed integers, you can convert them to unsigned integers, multiply the unsigned values, then test whether the result is in signed range.
Rewriting code in this way will be inconvenient, though, particularly if the signed values might be negative. Also, it may hurt performance. Using unsigned arithmetic to check for overflow is particularly painful to do portably and efficiently when dealing with an integer type like uid_t
whose width and signedness vary from platform to platform.
Furthermore, many C applications pervasively assume wraparound behavior and typically it is not easy to find and remove all these assumptions. Hence it is often useful to maintain nonstandard code that assumes wraparound on overflow, instead of rewriting the code. The rest of this section attempts to give practical advice for this situation.
If your code wants to detect signed integer overflow in sum = a + b
, it is generally safe to use an expression like (sum < a) != (b < 0)
.
If your code uses a signed loop index, make sure that the index cannot overflow, along with all signed expressions derived from the index. Here is a contrived example of problematic code with two instances of overflow.
for (i = INT_MAX - 10; i <= INT_MAX; i++) if (i + 1 < 0) { report_overflow (); break; }
Because of the two overflows, a compiler might optimize away or transform the two comparisons in a way that is incompatible with the wraparound assumption.
If your code uses an expression like (i * 2000) / 1000
and you actually want the multiplication to wrap around on overflow, use unsigned arithmetic to do it, e.g., ((int) (i * 2000u)) / 1000
.
If your code assumes wraparound behavior and you want to insulate it against any GCC optimizations that would fail to support that behavior, you should useGCC's -fwrapv option, which causes signed overflow to wrap around reliably (except for division and remainder, as discussed in the next section).
If you need to port to platforms where signed integer overflow does not reliably wrap around (e.g., due to hardware overflow checking, or to highly aggressive optimizations), you should consider debugging with GCC's -ftrapv option, which causes signed overflow to raise an exception.
Overflow in signed integer division is not always harmless: for example, on CPUs of the i386 family, dividing INT_MIN
by -1
yields a SIGFPE signal which by default terminates the program. Worse, taking the remainder of these two values typically yields the same signal on these CPUs, even though the C standard requires INT_MIN % -1
to yield zero because the expression does not overflow.
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auto
storage class specifier: Storage Class Specifiersbreak
statement: The break Statementchar
data type: Integer Typesconst
type qualifier: Type Qualifierscontinue
statement: The continue Statementdo
statement: The do Statementdouble
data type: Real Number Typeselse
statements: The if StatementEXIT_FAILURE
: The main FunctionEXIT_SUCCESS
: The main Functionextern
storage class specifier: Storage Class Specifiersfloat
data type: Real Number Typesfor
statement: The for Statementgoto
statement: The goto Statementif
statements: The if Statementint
data type: Integer Typeslong double
data type: Real Number Typeslong int
data type: Integer Typeslong long int
data type: Integer Typesregister
storage class specifier: Storage Class Specifiersreturn
statement: The return Statementmain
: The main Functionshort int
data type: Integer Typessigned char
data type: Integer Typesstatic
storage class specifier: Storage Class Specifiersswitch
statement: The switch Statementtypedef
statement: The typedef Statementunsigned char
data type: Integer Typesunsigned int
data type: Integer Typesunsigned long int
data type: Integer Typesunsigned long long int
data type: Integer Typesunsigned short int
data type: Integer Typesvolatile
type qualifier: Type Qualifierswhile
statement: The while Statement[1] C++ also has complex number support, but it is incompatible with the ISO C99 types
[2] a full declarator is a declaration of a function or an object which is not part of another object
[3] However if for example MAX
is INT_MAX
and x
is of type int
, we clearly have a problem with overflow. See Overflow.
[4] Rarely, argv[0]
can be a null pointer (in this case argc
is 0) or argv[0][0]
can be the null character. In any case, argv[argc]
is a null pointer.
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