1. It is wise then to insure that the final value of an expression is
ascertained upfront before it is being used in a function call as an
argument. I suppose this is applicable in all cases of expressions
and not limited to pre and post increments, although, pre and post
is where there is likely
Hello Andrew,
Thanks for your suggestion, but no difference in output.
Question: Did you expect different output too?
Thanks
Quo ting Andrew Pinski :
> On Mon, Jul 20, 2009 at 8:30 AM, wrote:
> > Hello,
> >
> > Here is a program with output in gcc (4.3.2) on pre and post increments:
>
> Try
Hello,
Here is a program with output in gcc (4.3.2) on pre and post increments:
//code begin
#include
main () {
int a;
a=1; printf ("1. %d %d\n", ++a, a); // 1. 2 2
a=1; printf ("2. %d %d\n", a, a++)