static function
在前面已经介绍了static function,本文结合一些具体的例子来对它进行分析。
What is static function
首先描述static function的概念。
stackoverflow What is a “static” function?
The question was about plain c functions, not c++ static
methods, as clarified in comments.
Ok, I understand what a static
variable is, but what is a static
function?
And why is it that if I declare a function, let's say void print_matrix
, in let's say a.c
(WITHOUT a.h
) and include "a.c"
- I get "print_matrix@@....) already defined in a.obj"
, BUT if I declare it as static void print_matrix
then it compiles?
UPDATE Just to clear things up - I know that including .c
is bad, as many of you pointed out. I just do it to temporarily clear space in main.c
until I have a better idea of how to group all those functions into proper .h
and .c
files. Just a temporary, quick solution.
A
static
functions are functions that are only visible to other functions in the same file (more precisely the same translation unit).
EDIT: For those who thought, that the author of the questions meant a 'class method': As the question is tagged C
he means a plain old C function. For (C++/Java/...) class methods, static
means that this method can be called on the class itself, no instance of that class necessary.
A
There is a big difference between static functions in C and static member functions in C++. In C, a static function is not visible outside of its translation unit, which is the object file it is compiled into. In other words, making a function static limits its scope. You can think of a static function as being "private" to its *.c file (although that is not strictly correct).
In C++, "static" can also apply to member functions and data members of classes. A static data member is also called a "class variable", while a non-static data member is an "instance variable". This is Smalltalk terminology. This means that there is only one copy of a static data member shared by all objects of a class, while each object has its own copy of a non-static data member. So a static data member is essentially a global variable, that is a member of a class.
Non-static member functions can access all data members of the class: static and non-static. Static member functions can only operate on the static data members.
One way to think about this is that in C++ static data members and static member functions do not belong to any object, but to the entire class.