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Home/ Questions/Q 8977153
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 15, 20262026-06-15T19:18:28+00:00 2026-06-15T19:18:28+00:00

I am reading an article about code obfuscation in C, and one of the

  • 0

I am reading an article about code obfuscation in C, and one of the examples declares the main function as:

int main(c,v) char *v; int c;{...}

I’ve never saw something like this, v and c are global variables?

The full example is this:

#include <stdio.h>

#define THIS printf(
#define IS "%s\n"
#define OBFUSCATION ,v);

int main(c, v) char *v; int c; {
   int a = 0; char f[32];
   switch (c) {
      case 0:
         THIS IS OBFUSCATION
         break;
      case 34123:
         for (a = 0; a < 13; a++) { f[a] = v[a*2+1];};
         main(0,f);
         break;
      default:
         main(34123,"@h3eglhl1o. >w%o#rtlwdl!S\0m");
         break;
      }
}

The article: brandonparker.net (No longer works), but can be found in web.archive.org

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-15T19:18:29+00:00Added an answer on June 15, 2026 at 7:18 pm

    It’s the old style function definition

    void foo(a,b)
    int a;
    float b;
    {
    // body
    }
    

    is same as

    void foo(int a, float b)
    {
    // body
    }
    

    Your case is same as int main(int c,char *v){...} But it’s not correct.

    The correct syntax is : int main(int c, char **v){...}

    Or, int main(int c, char *v[]){...}

    EDIT : Remember in main() , v should be char** not the char* as you have written.

    I think it’s K & R C style.

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