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why dont we need to refer to class name when referring to methods in c

Time:05-15

Coming from a good foundation in java to c , I'm really confused on why when we use the cmath library we don't have to call it like: classname.function like we do in java (ex: Math.sqrt()). I saw that we can just call sqrt(). How does it know which class this method is coming from. I also wasn't able to see wether this function is static or not or any visibility type on cppreference.com so it did not help to give me a clue either.

CodePudding user response:

It doesn't come from a class. Not every function in C is a class method. In fact, most of them aren't. Functions in C (and in many languages; Java is really the oddball here) can be standalone and can simply be called as-is.

Likewise, top-level functions can't be "static" in the Java sense, since they don't belong to a class. static is a keyword in C , and inside a class it's similar to Java's definition, but you won't find yourself using it very often in C . Outside a class, "static" means something totally unrelated.

The headline here is: Forget most of what you know about Java. Low-level control flow, like loops and conditionals, will mostly carry over. But C classes are a different beast, memory management in C is entirely different, and the way you structure your program is different.

Java paradigms work in Java, but if you follow those paradigms in C , you'll make everything a (raw) pointer, stick everything inside of a class, and litter new calls throughout your program. I've seen code that's written like this. I've had professors who were obviously Java coders forced to teach C , and it shows. Learn C as its own language, not as "diet Java". I cannot stress that point enough.

CodePudding user response:

In C you may opt to use namespace to achieve exactly that. For example you may declare function doSomething within namespace Math and then you refer to that function as Math::doSomething.

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