1) does the above program violate static variable rules?
No you are not vailoting any rules. Here foo function create copy of value of that static variable and used in other file. Its fine.
2) If not why is this so, and is there any other way to access static variable except including file (#include<>) not like this How am I able to access a static variable from another file?
Static variable are only mean to use in that file only.
You can not use that variable making them extern in other files.
Another dirty hack is to get pointer of that static variable and make that as global pointer and making that as extern in another file you can use that static variable.
file1.c
#include<stdio.h>
static int a=25;
int* ptr = &a;
file2.c
#include<stdio.h>
extern int *ptr;
int main()
{
printf("%d",*ptr);
return 0;
}
Correct me if I'm wrong with static variable concept and if any better solutions are available?
A static variable has a lifetime extends across the entire run of the program
If you do not initialize static variable with some value then its default value would be 0.
A static variable has scope limited to its file only. You can not access it by name from a different file.
You have temp1.c and temp2.c both are getting compiled together then also you can have static variable of same name in both files — and they are separate variables.
In C, how do I restrict the scope of a global variable to the file in which it's declared?
By making that global variable as static.
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