main() arguments, was Re: typedef-ing an array
Roger House
roger at everexn.uucp
Fri Jul 6 05:02:56 AEST 1990
In <4238 at jato.Jpl.Nasa.Gov> kaleb at mars.jpl.nasa.gov (Kaleb Keithley) writes:
>Second bone to pick is the assertion that main() has two arguments (???)
>Since when? What about the third allowable argument; envp? I know that
>both UNIX and DOS (M'soft C compilers anyway) support char **envp (or
>char *envp[] if you will) as the third parameter to main.
According to p11 of the Rationale for ANSI C:
main is the only function that may portably be declared either
with zero or two arguments. (The number of arguments must or-
dinarily match exactly between invocation and definition.) This
special case simply recognizes the widespread practice of leaving
off the arguments to main when the program does not access the
program argument strings. While many implementations support
more than two arguments to main, such practice is neither
blessed nor forbidden by the Standard; a program that defines
main with three arguments is not *strictly conforming*.
Roger House
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