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cgccstandardsexpression

Are compound statements (blocks) surrounded by parens expressions in ANSI C?


Browsing the Linux kernel sources I found some piece of code where a block of statements surrounded by parenthesis is treated as a expression a la lisp (or ML), that is, an expression which value is the value of the last statement.

For example:

int a = ({
    int i;
    int t = 1;
    for (i = 2; i<5; i++) {
        t*=i;
    }
    t;
});

I've been looking at the ANSI C grammar trying to figure out how this piece of code would fit in the parse tree, but I haven't been successful.

So, does anybody know if this behaviour is mandated by the standard or is just a peculiarity of GCC?

Update: I've tried with the flag -pedantic and the compiler now gives me a warning:

warning: ISO C forbids braced-groups within expressions

Solution

  • It's called "braced-group within expression".

    It's not allowed by ANSI/ISO C nor C++ but gcc supports it.