Say I want to print a message in C five times using a for
loop. Why is it that if I add a semicolon after for loop like this:
for (i=0;i<5;i++);
the message does not get printed 5 times, but it does if I do not put the semicolon there?
Many compilers show a syntax error when you put a semicolon after a for loop but according to gcc compiler(Linux) or Dev-cpp you can put a semicolon after a for loop and it will not show you any errors.
For example
for(int i=0;i<=5;i++);
or
for(int i=0;i<=5;i++)
{//blank body}
From the above example it is clear if we put blank braces or semicolon after for loop that means we haven't entered any variable yet.
Now come to your question.
If you want to print hello five times, you have to write your program as
for(int i=0;i<5;i++)
{
printf("hello");
}
I hope you understand
cheers!!
Rahul Vashisth
Semicolon is a legitimate statement called null statement * that means "do nothing". Since the for
loop executes a single operation (which could be a block enclosed in {}
) semicolon is treated as the body of the loop, resulting in the behavior that you observed.
The following code
for (i=0;i<5;i++);
{
printf("hello\n");
}
is interpreted as follows:
for (i=0;i<5;i++)
{
}
As you can see, the operation that gets repeated is ;
, not the printf
.
for (i=0;i<5;i++);
is equivalent to
for (i=0;i<5;i++){}
The statement consisting of just the ;
token is called the null statement and it does just... nothing.
For example, this is valid:
void foo(void)
{
;
;
;
}
It can be used everywhere a statement can be used, for example in:
if (bla)
;
else
;
See the C Standard paragraph:
(C99, 6.8.3p3) "A null statement (consisting of just a semicolon) performs no operations."
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