In reference to this question and this meta post. In said question, I initially posted this code:
if (condition1) {
do_something();
return;
}
if (condition2) {
if (do_stuff())
return;
}
if (condition3) {
do_anotherthing();
return;
}
// 10 more conditions
...with a description of do_stuff
. Yeah, it's unclear. It's not too hard to figure out what's going on, but I could have made it better. I was told in the meta post to make it more compilable. So I did:
int conditions[10] = {0};
// set conditions based on user input, etc.
if (condition[0]) {
do_something();
return;
}
if (condition[1]) {
if (do_stuff())
return;
}
if (condition[2]) {
do_anotherthing();
return;
}
// rest of the conditions
...with an example do_stuff
. I think this is pretty good. It is:
- Minimal, only contains strictly relevant code.
- Complete, compiles with little effort. Plus, I'm not asking for a bugfix so nobody needs to compile, I'm just asking about the C language itself.
- Verifiable, it's an exact watered-down example of the problem.
But I was told that this is still not an MCVE, because it's not complete since it can't compilable. What do I have to do to get an MCVE? Must I write it like this?
#include <stdio.h>
#include <ctype.h>
int main(void)
{
int conditions[10] = {0};
int c = getchar();
if (isnum(c))
conditions[c - '0'] = 1;
if (conditions[0]) {
printf("Let's pretend there is a condition here.\n");
return;
}
if (conditions[1]) {
printf("blah blah yes or no? [y] ");
if (getchar() == 'y') {
conditions[2] = 1;
return;
}
}
if (conditions[2]) {
printf("Let's say this actually does something.\n");
return;
}
printf("Let's pretend stuff is actually being done here\n");
return 0;
}
...while still somehow making it Minimal? What exactly should an MCVE be?