divide by zero - c programming

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春和景丽
春和景丽 2020-12-11 16:05

I have a question about the next code:

int main { 
double x = 0;
double y = 0/x;

if(y==1) {.....}
....
....
return 0;
}

When I run the cod

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  • 2020-12-11 16:46

    You can't rely on this "working" (i.e. doing the same thing all the time, portably) at all, it's undefined behavior in C for the second case, and also for the first if your implementation doesn't define __STDC_IEC_559__ (this is, I believe, rare these days).

    C99, §6.5.5/5

    The result of the / operator is the quotient from the division of the first operand by the second; the result of the % operator is the remainder. In both operations, if the value of the second operand is zero, the behavior is undefined.

    The fact you're getting a "Not a Number" in one case and and not in the other is that one is done in floating-point arithmetic, where, on your implementation (conforming to IEEE 754 division by zero semantics), 0/0 gives a NaN.

    In the second case, you're using integer arithmetic – undefined behavior, there's no predicting what will happen.

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  • 2020-12-11 16:48

    This is because IEEE 754 standard defines special values for positive and negative infinity along with "not a number" for floating-point values.

    Non-floating point types like int do not have those special values defined and so the run-time is being terminated due to un-handled error.

    This is not C-specific, you will see a very similar (if not the same) behavior in other languages simply because this functionality is down to hardware.

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  • 2020-12-11 17:03

    The reason you don't get an exception or error is because for a double, infinity and NaN are defined (see IEEE floating point) but when you try the same for integer, you'll get an error because NaN/Infinity aren't defined

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