Boolean in C
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Hi,
Can anyone share an example of implementing a boolean data type in C using typedef keyword?
P.S: I need it for my assignment.
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bool
is a built-in type in C, you don't have to implement anything. -
Yes Yes! I actually wanted an example of a C boolean using typedef keyword.
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Yes Yes! I actually wanted an example of a C boolean using typedef keyword.
@SaintBroseph
So what abouttypedef enum { false, true } mybool;
if that's the sort of thing your teacher wants from you, to show you understand?
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typedef bool boolean;
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Good point :D Corrected
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Yes Yes! I actually wanted an example of a C boolean using typedef keyword.
@SaintBroseph Here's an example (code) of C boolean using typedef
#include <stdio.h> // creating custom data type bool typedef enum {false, true} bool_enum; int main() { bool_enum x=false; // declaration and initialization if(x==true) // conditional statements printf("The value of x is true"); else printf("The value of x is false"); return 0; // Output: The value of x is false }
Source: [EDIT: Link removed --JKSH]
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typedef bool boolean; int main() { boolean A = false; if (A == false) printf("MESSAGE") else printf("MESSAGE") return 0; }
if your problem is solved then please close the thread
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comparing a boolean to true or false is redundant. Conditional expressions return a boolean (in C, 0 or not 0) so X or !X is adequate.
Also, bool is a C99 thing via <stdbool.h>. Much C legacy still exists where there is no real boolean type but instead zero or not zero logic.
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comparing a boolean to true or false is redundant. Conditional expressions return a boolean (in C, 0 or not 0) so X or !X is adequate.
Also, bool is a C99 thing via <stdbool.h>. Much C legacy still exists where there is no real boolean type but instead zero or not zero logic.
@Kent-Dorfman said in Boolean in C:
comparing a boolean to true or false is redundant.
Not to mention wrong, generally speaking.
1
evaluates totrue
but so does-1
, so comparing againsttrue
is simply the way to break it. Enums implicitly decay to the underlying type so checking againstcondition
and!condition
is the correct way to do it, even if atypedef
is used. -
I find it much easier to understand
if something is false
when I seeif (something == false)
than when I seeif (!something)
. Especially in longer expressions it is very easy to miss a single character like!
and read the code wrong. -
I find it much easier to understand
if something is false
when I seeif (something == false)
than when I seeif (!something)
. Especially in longer expressions it is very easy to miss a single character like!
and read the code wrong. -
I find it much easier to understand
if something is false
when I seeif (something == false)
than when I seeif (!something)
. Especially in longer expressions it is very easy to miss a single character like!
and read the code wrong.are you guys aware, that
not
is a valid keyword in c++ ? -
are you guys aware, that
not
is a valid keyword in c++ ?@J-Hilk
Yup. And it's devil's-spawn! ;-) [Same forand
&or
. If I wanted to program in Python or Pascal I would have picked that.] I would never use that, as "nobody" (most people) else uses it or knows about it, so I would regard it as an anti-pattern! -
are you guys aware, that
not
is a valid keyword in c++ ?@J-Hilk said in Boolean in C:
are you guys aware, that
not
is a valid keyword in c++ ?Yes but not in all compilers :-( MSVC does not recognize it.
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@J-Hilk said in Boolean in C:
are you guys aware, that
not
is a valid keyword in c++ ?Yes but not in all compilers :-( MSVC does not recognize it.
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@sierdzio
Good, but are you sure? Since it is valid since C99, I would have thought that MSVC would accept those?@JonB said in Boolean in C:
@sierdzio
Good, but are you sure? Since it is valid since C99, I would have thought that MSVC would accept those?Last time I tried was last year. Clang, GCC all are 100% fine with it, MSVC was throwing errors.
I now see it's supposed to be defined in some
iso646.h
header, I never included it, perhaps that's the reason. -
@J-Hilk said in Boolean in C:
are you guys aware, that
not
is a valid keyword in c++ ?Yes but not in all compilers :-( MSVC does not recognize it.
@sierdzio said in Boolean in C:
Yes but not in all compilers :-( MSVC does not recognize it.
VS been nonconforming! 😱 Color me surprised 😉
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@JonB said in Boolean in C:
@sierdzio
Good, but are you sure? Since it is valid since C99, I would have thought that MSVC would accept those?Last time I tried was last year. Clang, GCC all are 100% fine with it, MSVC was throwing errors.
I now see it's supposed to be defined in some
iso646.h
header, I never included it, perhaps that's the reason.