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Home/ Questions/Q 9074465
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 16, 20262026-06-16T18:38:30+00:00 2026-06-16T18:38:30+00:00

Reading some topics I found this piece of code, and I’m wondering, how does

  • 0

Reading some topics I found this piece of code, and I’m wondering, how does it works, because it prinst:

5
2

The code:

static int a = 7;

int test()
{
  return a--;
}

int main()
{
  for(test();test();test())
  {
    cout << test() << "\n";
  }
  return 0;
}
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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-16T18:38:32+00:00Added an answer on June 16, 2026 at 6:38 pm

    Order of operations, as presented:

    1. a is globally initialized on startup. to 7
    2. Initializer of for-loop is hit first, test() decrements a to 6, then returns the prior value (7), which is ignored.
    3. The test case of for-loop is hit, test() decrements a to 5, then returns the prior value (6) which passes the non-zero test so the for-loop can continue.
    4. The cout statement; test() decrements a to 4, returning the prior value (5) which is sent to cout.
    5. The increment-statement of the for-loop is executed. test() decrements a to 3, returning the prior value (4), which is ignored.
    6. The test case of the for-loop is hit. test() decrements a to 2, returning the prior value (3), which passes the non-zero test and the loop continues.
    7. The cout statement; test() decrements a to 1, returning the prior value (2) which is sent to cout.
    8. The increment-statement of the for-loop is executed. test() decrements a to 0, returning the prior value (1), which is ignored.
    9. The test case of the for-loop is hit. test() decrements a to -1, returning the prior value (0), which fails the non-zero test and the loop terminates.

    Now. Start that loop at 6 or 8 and see what happens. =P

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