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Home/ Questions/Q 4005682
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 20, 20262026-05-20T08:25:24+00:00 2026-05-20T08:25:24+00:00

I am writing a library where I need to use some constant integers. I

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I am writing a library where I need to use some constant integers. I have declared constant int as a local variable in my c function e.g. const int test = 45325;

Now I want to hide this constant variable. What it means is, if I share this library as a .so with someone, he should not be able to find out this constant value ?
Is it possible to hide constant integers defined inside a library ? Please help

Here is my sample code

int doSomething()
{

const int abc = 23456;
int def = abc + 123;

}

doSomething is defined as local function in my cpp file. I am referring this constant for some calculations inside the same function.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-20T08:25:25+00:00Added an answer on May 20, 2026 at 8:25 am

    If I understand right, you’re not so much worried about an exported symbol (since it’s a plain normal local variable, I’d not worry about that anyway), but about anyone finding out that constant at all (probably because it is an encryption key or a magic constant for a license check, or something the like).

    This is something that is, in principle, impossible. Someone who has the binary code (which is necessarily the case in a library) can figure it out if he wants to. You can make it somewhat harder by calculating this value in an obscure way (but be aware of compiler optimizations), but even so this only makes it trivially harder for someone who wants to find out. It will just mean that someone won’t see “mov eax, 45325” in the disassembly right away, but it probably won’t keep someone busy for more than a few minutes either way.

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