Ever since I realized many years ago, that this doesn\'t produce an error by default (in GCC at least), I\'ve always wondered why?
I understand that you can issue co
C99 and C++ standards don't require functions to return a value. The missing return statement in a value-returning function will be defined (to return 0
) only in the main
function.
The rationale includes that checking if every code path returns a value is quite difficult, and a return value could be set with embedded assembler or other tricky methods.
From C++11 draft:
§ 6.6.3/2
Flowing off the end of a function [...] results in undefined behavior in a value-returning function.
§ 3.6.1/5
If control reaches the end of
main
without encountering areturn
statement, the effect is that of executingreturn 0;
Note that the behaviour described in C++ 6.6.3/2 is not the same in C.
gcc will give you a warning if you call it with -Wreturn-type option.
-Wreturn-type Warn whenever a function is defined with a return-type that defaults to int. Also warn about any return statement with no return-value in a function whose return-type is not void (falling off the end of the function body is considered returning without a value), and about a return statement with an expression in a function whose return-type is void.
This warning is enabled by -Wall.
Just as a curiosity, look what this code does:
#include
int foo() {
int a = 5;
int b = a + 1;
}
int main() { std::cout << foo() << std::endl; } // may print 6
This code has formally undefined behaviour, and in practice it's calling convention and architecture dependent. On one particular system, with one particular compiler, the return value is the result of last expression evaluation, stored in the eax
register of that system's processor.