I try to figure out why my c-compiler gives me no warning/error with following (simplified) code.
The function-declaration have no parameters while the function-implemen
In C this function declaration
void foo();
means that there is nothing known about the function parameters in the point of the declaration.
The types and number of the parameters are deduced from a function call.
As for your program then this call
foo();
has undefined behavior because the number of parameters and the number of arguments mismatch.
Because of backward compatibility, a declaration like
void foo();
doesn't declare a function that takes no argument, it declares a function which takes an unknown number of arguments of unknown type.
That means both your calls are correct, and the compiler can't really warn you about it.
The other problematic thing is that the declaration in the source file actually matches the declaration in the header file, it just makes it more precise. Therefore you will not get a warning or error there either.