问题
For reasons that are not worth mentioning, I want to know if there's a standard defined value for boolean expressions. E.g.
int foo () {
return (bar > 5);
}
The context is that I'm concerned that our team defined TRUE as something different than 1, and I'm concerned that someone may do:
if (foo() == TRUE) { /* do stuff */ }
I know that the best option would be to simply do
if (foo())
but you never know.
Is there a defined standard value for boolean expressions or is it up to the compiler? If there is, is the standard value something included in C99? what about C89?
回答1:
An operator such as ==, !=, &&, and || that results in a boolean value will evaluate to 1 of the expression is true and 0 if the expression is false. The type of this expressing is int.
So if the TRUE macro is not defined as 1, a comparison such as the above will fail.
When an expression is evaluated in a boolean context, 0 evaluates to false and non-zero evaluates to true. So to be safe, TRUE should be defined as:
#define TRUE (!0)
As was mentioned in the comments, if your compiler is C99 compliant, you can #include <stdbool.h> and use true and false.
According to C99:
6.5.3.3 (Unary arithmetic operators)
The result of the logical negation operator
!is 0 if the value of its operand compares unequal to 0, 1 if the value of its operand compares equal to 0. The result has typeint. The expression!Eis equivalent to(0==E).
6.5.8 (Relational operators)
Each of the operators
<(less than),>(greater than),<=(less than or equal to), and>=(greater than or equal to) shall yield 1 if the specified relation is true and 0 if it is false. The result has typeint.
6.5.9 (Equality operators)
The
==(equal to) and!=(not equal to) operators are analogous to the relational operators except for their lower precedence. Each of the operators yields 1 if the specified relation is true and 0 if it is false. The result has typeint.
6.5.13 (Logical AND operator)
The
&&operator shall yield 1 if both of its operands compare unequal to 0; otherwise, it yields 0. The result has typeint.
6.5.14 (Logical OR operator)
The
||operator shall yield 1 if either of its operands compare unequal to 0; otherwise, it yields 0. The result has typeint.
回答2:
The C programming language does not define Boolean value. Traditionally, the C programming language uses integer types to represent boolean data types.
Boolean values in C:
0 = false`
Any other value = true`
Usually people will use 1 for true.
C99 introduced the_Bool data type that is not available in other C derivates.See wikipedia link here. Additionally, a new header stdbool.h has been added for compatibility reasons. This header allows programmers to use boolean types in the same way, as in C++ language.
To use bool in C, we can use enum as below.
enum bool {
false, true
};
bool value;
value = bool(0); // False
value = bool(1); // True
if(value == false)
printf("Value is false");
else
printf("Value is true");
Also, related Stack overflow question Is bool a native C type?
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/39730583/return-value-of-a-boolean-expression-in-c