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Please... Explain...
#include <stdio.h> int main() { unsigned int i; int c=0; for(i=0;i<10;i--)c++; printf("%d",c); return 0; } //Output is 1 // How ?
2 Answers
+ 5
i is unsigned, it can't take a negative value. If i is 0 and you subtract 1, the result won't be -1 but a huge number (because of an overflow).
You can prove it like this:
int main() {
unsigned int i = 0;
printf("i > 100? %d\n", i > 100); // 0 (no, 0 is not > 100)
--i; // i = 0 - 1, but it can't take a negative value => overflow
printf("i > 100? %d\n", i > 100); // 1 (yes, 0-1 is > 100 for an unsigned integer)
return 0;
}
That's why after i-- the condition i < 10 is false and the loop will only be executed once. c is incremented once => c = 1
+ 3
thank you so much i got it...