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(void)0 (+;) is a valid, but 'does-nothing' C++ expression, that's everything. It doesn't translate to the no-op instruction of the target architecture, it's just an empty statement as placeholder whenever the language expects a complete statement (for example as target for a jump label, or in the body of an if clause).
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You should note that, used as a macro (say, #define noop (void)0), the (void) prevents it from being accidentally used as a value (as in int x = noop.
(void)0的理解
最新推荐文章于 2024-07-08 13:22:24 发布