As an assignment in school, we have to write a C++ program and returns different error codes in the main
.
The problem is that we have to return -2
The problem is that what is returned to the OS is then interpreted by the OS shell as IT likes it, not as your program likes.
the main function returns an int, and return -2
is just what your program has to do.
253 is -2 in 2s complement onto 8 bits.
The problem -here- is a mismatch between the C++ specs (int main()
) and the way the shell use it. But it does not depend on the program.
The assignment itself is a trap.
From C++11 standard 18.5/8:
If status is zero or EXIT_SUCCESS, an implementation-defined form of the status successful termination is returned. If status is EXIT_FAILURE, an implementation-defined form of the status unsuccessful termination is returned. Otherwise the status returned is implementation-defined.
Thus is it completely compliant that you get different results for different platforms, and/or compilers.
Unix, and linux are limited to 8 bit return codes, -2 is 0xfe. Which your shell will understand to be 254 when you echo $?
You're expected to give a return code between 0 and 255.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Exit_status
on POSIX-compatible exit statuses are restricted to values 0-255, the range of an unsigned 8-bit integer.