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Home/ Questions/Q 773719
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 14, 20262026-05-14T19:00:39+00:00 2026-05-14T19:00:39+00:00

Is the missing semicolon error really required? Why not treat it as a warning?

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Is the “missing semicolon” error really required? Why not treat it as a warning?

When I compile this code

int f = 1
int h=2;

the compiler intelligently tells me that where I am missing it. But to me it’s like – “If you know it, just treat it as if it’s there and go ahead. (Later I can fix the warning.)

  int sdf = 1, df=2;
  sdf=1 df =2

Even for this code, it behaves the same. That is, even if multiple statements (without 😉 are in the same line, the compiler knows.

So, why not just remove this requirement? Why not behave like Python, Visual Basic, etc.

Summary of discussion

Two examples/instances were missing, and a semi-colon would actually cause a problem.

1.

return
 (a+b)

This was presented as one of the worst aspects of JavaScript. But, in this scenario, semicolon insertion is a problem for JavaScript, but not
for C++. In C++, you will get another error if ; insertion is done after return. That is, a missing return value.

2

int *y;
int f = 1
*y = 2;

For this I guess, there is no better way than to introduce as statement separator, that is, a semicolon.

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-14T19:00:40+00:00Added an answer on May 14, 2026 at 7:00 pm

    There are many cases where a semicolon is needed.

    What if you had:

    int *y;
    int f = 1
    *y = 2;
    

    This would be parsed as

    int *y;
    int f = 1 * y = 2;
    

    So without the semicolons it is ambiguous.

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