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Compiler warning - suggest parentheses around assignment used as truth value

When I try to compile the piece of code below, I get this warning:

warning: suggest parentheses around assignment used as truth value

Why does this happen? This is a rather common idiom, I believe. I even use something like it earlier on my code.

struct PIDList* 
getRecordForPID(struct PIDList* list, pid_t pid) {
    while(list = list->next)
        if (list->pid == pid)
            return list;

    return NULL;
}
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F. P. Avatar asked Mar 29 '11 17:03

F. P.


3 Answers

Be explicit - then the compiler won't warn that you perhaps made a mistake.

while ( (list = list->next) != NULL )

or

while ( (list = list->next) )

Some day you'll be glad the compiler told you, people do make that mistake ;)

like image 158
Erik Avatar answered Nov 11 '22 00:11

Erik


While that particular idiom is common, even more common is for people to use = when they mean ==. The convention when you really mean the = is to use an extra layer of parentheses:

while ((list = list->next)) { // yes, it's an assignment
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geekosaur Avatar answered Nov 11 '22 00:11

geekosaur


It's just a 'safety' warning. It is a relatively common idiom, but also a relatively common error when you meant to have == in there. You can make the warning go away by adding another set of parentheses:

while ((list = list->next))
like image 22
Carl Norum Avatar answered Nov 10 '22 23:11

Carl Norum