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Home/ Questions/Q 6473711
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 25, 20262026-05-25T06:29:57+00:00 2026-05-25T06:29:57+00:00

Here’s the deal. I’ve had two identical global variables in two different .c files,

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Here’s the deal. I’ve had two identical global variables in two different .c files, they weren’t declared as extern. So each .c file should have seen its own variable, right?

But I have gotten some really strange behaviour, as if one file was reading the other files variable (after linking them together). Adding ‘static’ qualifier to both variables definitions seemed to fix this issue.

So what I’m actually wondering is, what exactly happened there without the ‘static’ qualifier?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-25T06:29:58+00:00Added an answer on May 25, 2026 at 6:29 am

    So each .c file should have seen its own variable, right?

    Wrong. In C, omitting static from a declaration means implicit extern linkage.

    From C In a Nutshell:

    The compiler treats function declarations without a storage class
    specifier as if they included the specifier extern. Similarly, any
    object identifiers that you declare outside all functions and without
    a storage class specifier have external linkage
    .

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