Specifies that the function does not return to its point of invocation.
_Noreturn function_declaration | (since C11) |
The _Noreturn
keyword appears in a function declaration and specifies that the function does not return by executing the return statement or by reaching the end of the function body (it may return by executing longjmp
). If the function declared _Noreturn
returns, the behavior is undefined. A compiler diagnostic is recommended if this can be detected.
The _Noreturn
specifier may appear more than once in the same function declaration, the behavior is the same as if it appeared once.
This specifier is typically used through the convenience macro noreturn
, which is provided in the header stdnoreturn.h
.
The following functions are noreturn
in the standard library:
#include <stdlib.h> #include <stdio.h> #include <stdnoreturn.h> // causes undefined behavior if i <= 0 // exits if i > 0 noreturn void stop_now(int i) // or _Noreturn void stop_now(int i) { if (i > 0) exit(i); } int main(void) { puts("Preparing to stop..."); stop_now(2); puts("This code is never executed."); }
Output:
Preparing to stop...
C++ documentation for [[noreturn]] |
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