Can a function prototype typedef be used in function definitions?

血红的双手。 提交于 2019-11-27 00:52:27

问题


I have a series of functions with the same prototype, say

int func1(int a, int b) {
  // ...
}
int func2(int a, int b) {
  // ...
}
// ...

Now, I want to simplify their definition and declaration. Of course I could use a macro like that:

#define SP_FUNC(name) int name(int a, int b)

But I'd like to keep it in C, so I tried to use the storage specifier typedef for this:

typedef int SpFunc(int a, int b);

This seems to work fine for the declaration:

SpFunc func1; // compiles

but not for the definition:

SpFunc func1 {
  // ...
}

which gives me the following error:

error: expected '=', ',', ';', 'asm' or '__attribute__' before '{' token

Is there a way to do this correctly or is it impossible? To my understanding of C this should work, but it doesn't. Why?


Note, gcc understands what I am trying to do, because, if I write

SpFunc func1 = { /* ... */ }

it tells me

error: function 'func1' is initialized like a variable

Which means that gcc understands that SpFunc is a function type.


回答1:


You cannot define a function using a typedef for a function type. It's explicitly forbidden - refer to 6.9.1/2 and the associated footnote:

The identifier declared in a function definition (which is the name of the function) shall have a function type, as specified by the declarator portion of the function definition.

The intent is that the type category in a function definition cannot be inherited from a typedef:

typedef int F(void); // type F is "function with no parameters
                     // returning int"
F f, g; // f and g both have type compatible with F
F f { /* ... */ } // WRONG: syntax/constraint error
F g() { /* ... */ } // WRONG: declares that g returns a function
int f(void) { /* ... */ } // RIGHT: f has type compatible with F
int g() { /* ... */ } // RIGHT: g has type compatible with F
F *e(void) { /* ... */ } // e returns a pointer to a function
F *((e))(void) { /* ... */ } // same: parentheses irrelevant
int (*fp)(void); // fp points to a function that has type F
F *Fp; //Fp points to a function that has type F



回答2:


A typedef defines a type, not a header (which is source code text). You have to use #define (although I don't recommend it) if you need to factor out the code for the header.

([Edited] The reason the first one works is that it's not defining a prototype -- it's defining a variable of the type defined by the typedef, which isn't what you want.)



来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/4574985/can-a-function-prototype-typedef-be-used-in-function-definitions

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