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Home/ Questions/Q 8987579
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 15, 20262026-06-15T21:49:50+00:00 2026-06-15T21:49:50+00:00

I am interested in understanding how the compiler is interpreting the statement… Project type

  • 0

I am interested in understanding how the compiler is interpreting the statement…

Project type is C++
IDE is XCode 3.2 64bit
Operating system is Mac OS X 10.6.8

Caution: The code sample is an infinite loop.

In the code sample below or in the attached image. What is the compiler doing if anything. No major error is raised and no minor errors either (given my current compiler settings). Mostly interested in understanding what is happening in case statement C:

    bool nrContinue;
    enum Task {

        A,
        B,
        C,
        D

    };

    nrContinue = 1;
    Task nrTask = A;

    while (nrContinue) {

        switch (nrTask) {

            case A:

                cout << endl << "Processing task: " << A;
                nrTask = B;

                break;
            case B:

                cout << endl << "Processing task: " << B;
                nrTask = C;

                break;
            case C:

                cout << endl << "Processing task: " << C;

                // --------------------------------------------------
                // Below is the statement of my misunderstanding

                D;      // What is going on at this statement

                break;
            case D:

                cout << endl << "Processing task: " << C;
                nrContinue = 0;

                break;
            default:

                cout << endl << "Default case was unexpected.";
                nrContinue = 0;

                break;

        }

    } // loop
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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-15T21:49:51+00:00Added an answer on June 15, 2026 at 9:49 pm

    A line (or more) of code of the form

    expression;
    

    is known as an expression statement. The expression is evaluated, and the program’s state changes according to the side-effects of the expression. So for example:

    nrTask = C;
    

    causes the program to evaluate the expression nrTask = C, which has the side-effect of changing the value of nrTask.

    D; evaluates the expression D, which has no side-effects and therefore does nothing.

    The language allows any expression to be used as the body of an expression statement; however, a good compiler should issue a warning if it has no effect, since it’s almost always a mistake. If you enable warnings (-Wunused-value for just that warning, or better still -Wall -Wextra for many useful warnings), then the compiler should point out your mistake with a warning like “statement has no effect”.

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