main()
is the old K&R style where the int
was omitted as the return type defaults to int
if not specified (you should specify it). Additionally, empty parentheses is in K&R style to show it takes no arguments.. in C99 this should now be void
to indicate such. Empty parentheses means that the function will accept any number of arguments of any type, which is clearly not what you want. So the final result is:
int main(void) { ... }
main()
should return int
.. convention says a return 0;
statement at the end will help indicate to the caller that the program executed successfully - non-0 return values indicate abnormal termination.
A more direct answer to your question would be that main() { ... }
works because it's not wrong. The compiler sees that no return type was declared for the main
function so it defaults to int
. The empty parentheses indicates to it that main
takes any number of arguments of any type, which is not wrong either. However, to conform to C99 style/standard, use
int main(void) { ... }
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