#include <stdio.h>
int main(void)
{
int a = 0, b = 1;
a = (a = 5) && (b = 0);
printf("%d", a);
printf("%d", b);
}
The value of variable a is getting updated twice, which violates the C standards. So I think it will be compiler dependent. My I ran this code in lot of online C compilers and all are giving same output.
The behavior of this code is well defined due to the sequence point introduced by the && operator. This is spelled out in section 6.5.13p4 of the C standard regarding the logical AND operator &&:
Unlike the bitwise binary
&operator, the&&operator guarantees left-to-right evaluation; if the second operand is evaluated, there is a sequence point between the evaluations of the first and second operands. If the first operand compares equal to 0, the second operand is not evaluated.
Going through the code:
a = (a = 5) && (b = 0);
The left side of the && operator, i.e. (a = 5) is evaluated first, which sets a to 5. This evaluates to true, so there is then a sequence point before the right side, i.e. (b = 0) is evaluated. This sets b to 0 and evaluates to false, so the && operator results in the value 0. This value is then assigned to a.
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