Notice: This page requires JavaScript to function properly.
Please enable JavaScript in your browser settings or update your browser.
Impara Declaration vs Definition | Prototype | Functions
Practice
Projects
Quizzes & Challenges
Quizzes
Challenges
/
C++ Intermediate | Mobile-Friendly

bookDeclaration vs Definition | Prototype

Functions in C++ consist of 2 elements:

  • Declaration: the function's name with parameters (if they exist).
  • Definition: the function’s body.
void myFunc() { // Declaration
    // Definition
}

The function declaration is also called the function’s prototype. The code body (the definition) can be defined separately. It’s a good rule to write before the main function prototypes of other functions to understand how many functions we have and which arguments it passes. After the main function, you should specify the function’s definitions:

// Function prototype
void myFunc(string name);

int main() {
    myFunc("Sheldon");
    return 0;
}
// Function definition
void myFunc(string name) {
    cout << "Hi " << name;
}

It doesn’t affect your code if you specify prototypes or not. We won’t do this in further chapters since our code is still pretty simple and doesn’t need strict structurization.

question mark

Choose correct statements:

Select the correct answer

Tutto è chiaro?

Come possiamo migliorarlo?

Grazie per i tuoi commenti!

Sezione 4. Capitolo 10

Chieda ad AI

expand

Chieda ad AI

ChatGPT

Chieda pure quello che desidera o provi una delle domande suggerite per iniziare la nostra conversazione

Suggested prompts:

Mi faccia domande su questo argomento

Riassuma questo capitolo

Mostri esempi dal mondo reale

bookDeclaration vs Definition | Prototype

Scorri per mostrare il menu

Functions in C++ consist of 2 elements:

  • Declaration: the function's name with parameters (if they exist).
  • Definition: the function’s body.
void myFunc() { // Declaration
    // Definition
}

The function declaration is also called the function’s prototype. The code body (the definition) can be defined separately. It’s a good rule to write before the main function prototypes of other functions to understand how many functions we have and which arguments it passes. After the main function, you should specify the function’s definitions:

// Function prototype
void myFunc(string name);

int main() {
    myFunc("Sheldon");
    return 0;
}
// Function definition
void myFunc(string name) {
    cout << "Hi " << name;
}

It doesn’t affect your code if you specify prototypes or not. We won’t do this in further chapters since our code is still pretty simple and doesn’t need strict structurization.

question mark

Choose correct statements:

Select the correct answer

Tutto è chiaro?

Come possiamo migliorarlo?

Grazie per i tuoi commenti!

Sezione 4. Capitolo 10
some-alt