I had this Reopen audit, and I voted to reopen, and this was wrong!
Can someone please explain to me the following piece of code?
while(scanf("%d%d\n", p, q) == 2)
Is this really too broad? Why?
I had this Reopen audit, and I voted to reopen, and this was wrong!
Can someone please explain to me the following piece of code?
while(scanf("%d%d\n", p, q) == 2)
Is this really too broad? Why?
There are at least three possible separate items on that line that could be "explained"; arguably more, depending on how far you want to delve into details. Virtually all "here is code, please explain" questions are too broad. We have no idea what the OP wants to know exactly or what they're confused about. Do they not understand what the code does logically? Do they not understand one specific operation within this code? Do they want to know how exactly the code gets to the result it does? If so, in how much detail? Is it enough to cite the manual definition of what the involved functions do, or does the OP want to know about behind-the-scenes pointers and memory allocation? Should we be enumerating all possible cases in which this code may fail or educate the OP about edge-cases in general? Is there any specific operator or function they don't understand? Have they consulted the manual, and possibly not understood what the manual tells them? Does that mean we need to regurgitate the manual in simpler terms? Do they expect an introductory course to the language syntax?
Such questions really generate more questions than anyone can answer. If the OP doesn't understand what a piece of code does, they need to clearly tell us what they do understand and what exactly they don't understand and to what level of detail they require an answer.
p
andq
are, which we don't know. In addition, the question title seem to focus on the meaning of the==
operator, and if we have to start explaining what the==
operator is and does in C we'll be here all day.while
?scanf
?"%d%d\n"
?==
? Their combination? Something else? --> too broadscanf()
return?, it is readily answerable by reading the documentation. Otherwise, there are too many unknowns: what ifp
andq
are not pointers? What if they're not pointers tosigned int
? What if they're pointers tounsigned int
?signed long
?double
? What ifp == q
? And so on and so forth.