I run the following C codes and got a warning: control reaches end of non-void function
int main(void) {} Any suggestions?
13 Answers
Just put return 0 in your main(). Your function main returns an int (int main(void)) therefore you should add a return in the end of it.
Control reaches the end of a non-void function
Problem: I received the following warning: warning: control reaches end of non-void function
Solution: This warning is similar to the warning described in Return with no value. If control reaches the end of a function and no return is encountered, GCC assumes a return with no return value. However, for this, the function requires a return value. At the end of the function, add a return statement that returns a suitable return value, even if control never reaches there.
Solution:
int main(void) { my_strcpy(strB, strA); puts(strB); return 0; } 0As an alternative to the obvious solution of adding a return statement to main(), you can use a C99 compiler (“gcc -std=c99” if you are using GCC).
In C99 it is legal for main() not to have a return statement, and then the final } implicitly returns 0.
$ gcc -c -Wall t.c t.c: In function ‘main’: t.c:20: warning: control reaches end of non-void function $ gcc -c -Wall -std=c99 t.c $ A note that purists would consider important: you should not fix the warning by declaring main() as returning type void.
The main function has a return-type of int, as indicated in
int main(void) however your main function does not return anything, it closes after
puts(strB); Add
return 0; after that and it will work.