Header/Include guards don't work?

馋奶兔 提交于 2019-12-01 05:56:01

The include guards are functioning correctly and are not the source of the problem.

What happens is that every compilation unit that includes thing.h gets its own int something = 0, so the linker complains about multiple definitions.

Here is how you fix this:

thing.c:

#include "thing.h"

int something = 0;

int increment(){
    return something++;
}

thing.h:

#ifndef THING_H_
#define THING_H_

#include <stdio.h>

extern int something;

int increment();

#endif

This way, only thing.c will have an instance of something, and main.c will refer to it.

The header guards will stop the file from being compiled more than once in the same compilation unit (file). You are including it in main.c and thing.c, so it will be compiled once in each, leading to the variable something being declared once in each unit, or twice in total.

You have one definition in each translation unit (one in main.c, and one in thing.c). The header guards stop the header from being included more than once in a single translation unit.

You need to declare something in the header file, and only define it in thing.c, just like the function:

thing.c:

#include "thing.h"

int something = 0;

int increment(void)
{
    return something++;
}

thing.h:

#ifndef THING_H_
#define THING_H_

#include <stdio.h>

extern int something;

int increment(void);

#endif

try to avoid defining variables globally. use functions like increment() to modify and read its value instead. that way you can keep the variable static in the thing.c file, and you know for sure that only functions from that file will modify the value.

The variable something should be defined in a .c file, not in a header file.

Only structures, macros and type declarations for variables and function prototypes should be in header files. In your example, you can declare the type of something as extern int something in the header file. But the definition of the variable itself should be in a .c file.

With what you have done, the variable something will be defined in each .c file that includes thing.h and you get a "something defined multiple times" error message when GCC tries to link everything together.

what ifndef is guarding is one .h included in a .c more than once. For instance

thing. h

#ifndef
#define

int something = 0;
#endif

thing2.h

#include "thing.h"

main.c

#include "thing.h"
#include "thing2.h"
int main()
{
  printf("%d", something);
  return 0;
}

if I leave ifndef out then GCC will complain

 In file included from thing2.h:1:0,
             from main.c:2:
thing.h:3:5: error: redefinition of ‘something’
thing.h:3:5: note: previous definition of ‘something’ was here
易学教程内所有资源均来自网络或用户发布的内容,如有违反法律规定的内容欢迎反馈
该文章没有解决你所遇到的问题?点击提问,说说你的问题,让更多的人一起探讨吧!