GNU C extends ISO C to allow a function prototype to override a later old-style non-prototype definition. Consider the following example:
/* Use prototypes unless the compiler is old-fashioned. */ #ifdef __STDC__ #define P(x) x #else #define P(x) () #endif /* Prototype function declaration. */ int isroot P((uid_t)); /* Old-style function definition. */ int isroot (x) /* ??? lossage here ??? */ uid_t x; { return x == 0; }
Suppose the type uid_t
happens to be short
. ISO C does not allow this example, because subword arguments in old-style non-prototype definitions are promoted. Therefore in this example the function definition’s argument is really an int
, which does not match the prototype argument type of short
.
This restriction of ISO C makes it hard to write code that is portable to traditional C compilers, because the programmer does not know whether the uid_t
type is short
, int
, or long
. Therefore, in cases like these GNU C allows a prototype to override a later old-style definition. More precisely, in GNU C, a function prototype argument type overrides the argument type specified by a later old-style definition if the former type is the same as the latter type before promotion. Thus in GNU C the above example is equivalent to the following:
int isroot (uid_t); int isroot (uid_t x) { return x == 0; }
GNU C++ does not support old-style function definitions, so this extension is irrelevant.
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Licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.3.
https://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc-7.3.0/gcc/Function-Prototypes.html