Why do all the C files written by my lecturer start with a #?
I'm going through some C course notes, and every C program source file begins with a single #
on the first line of the program.
Then there are blank spaces, and following that other stuff followed by the main
function.
What is the reason for the #
?
(It's out of term now and I can't really ask the chap.)
Here's an example (there is an extra line at the end of the closing }
)
#
#include <stdio.h>
int main() {
printf("Hello, World!");
return 0;
}
Wow, this requirement goes way back to the 1970s.
In the very early days of pre-standardised C, if you wanted to invoke the preprocessor, then you had to write a
#
as the first thing in the first line of a source file. Writing only a#
at the top of the file affords flexibility in the placement of the other preprocessor directives.From an original C draft by the great Dennis Ritchie himself:
That document makes for great reading (and allowed me to jump on this question like a mad cat).
I suspect it's the lecturer simply being sentimental - it hasn't been required certainly since ANSI C.
Does Nothing
As of the ISO standard of C/C++:
So in today's compilers, that empty hash does not do anything (like-
new-line ;
has no functionality).PS: In pre-standardised C,
# new-line
had an important role, it was used to invoke the C Pre-Processor (as pointed out by @Bathsheba). So, the code here was either written within that time period, or came from habit.