When I was first introduced to C I was told to always declare my variables at the top of the function. Now that I have a strong grasp of the language I am focusing my efforts on coding style, particularly limiting the scope of my variables. I have read about the benefits to limiting the scope and I came across an interesting example. Apparently, C99 allows you to do this...
for (int i = 0; i < 10; i++)
{
puts("hello");
}
I had thought that a variables scope was limited by the inner-most surrounding curly braces { }
, but in the above example int i
appears to be limited in scope by the curly braces of the for-loop even though it is declared outside of them.
I tried to extend the above example with fgets()
to do what I thought was something similar but both of these gave me a syntax error.
fgets(char fpath[80], 80, stdin);
*See Note**
fgets(char* fpath = malloc(80), 80, stdin);
So, just where exactly is it legal to declare variables in C99? Was the for-loop example an exception to the rule? Does this apply to while
and do while
loops as well?
*Note**: I'm not even sure this would be syntactically correct even if I could declare the char array there since fgets()
is looking for pointer to char not pointer to array 80 of char. This is why I tried the malloc()
version.
See Question&Answers more detail:
os 与恶龙缠斗过久,自身亦成为恶龙;凝视深渊过久,深渊将回以凝视…