Why a variable can't be defined twice in 2 files in C

家住魔仙堡 提交于 2019-11-30 10:58:45

I think you need 6.9.2/2:

A declaration of an identifier for an object that has file scope without an initializer, and without a storage-class specifier or with the storage-class specifier static, constitutes a tentative definition. If a translation unit contains one or more tentative definitions for an identifier, and the translation unit contains no external definition for that identifier, then the behavior is exactly as if the translation unit contains a file scope declaration of that identifier, with the composite type as of the end of the translation unit, with an initializer equal to 0.

and 6.9/5:

An external definition is an external declaration that is also a definition of a function (other than an inline definition) or an object. If an identifier declared with external linkage is used in an expression (other than as part of the operand of a sizeof operator whose result is an integer constant), somewhere in the entire program there shall be exactly one external definition for the identifier; otherwise, there shall be no more than one.

Basically, int a; is a tentative definition. You can have multiple tentative definitions in a single translation unit but the effect is the same as having one non-tentative external definition (e.g. something like int a = 0;). Having more that one definition of an object with external linkage in a program is a violation of 6.9/5.

Note that it is a "common extension" to allow more than one external definitions of an object so long as at most only one is initialized and the definitions agree (see J.5.11).

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