Reputation:
Sample1.c
#include "stdio.h"
int f1(int x, int y)
{
printf("%d %d", x, y);
return x+y;
}
Sample2.c
#include "stdio.h"
extern int f1(int x,int y);
int main(void)
{
printf(" %d\n", f1(5,6));
return 0;
}
I was trying to compile the Sample1.c
file then Sample2.c
on Turbo C/C++ Compiler (Windows XP). It shows the following error:
Compiling Sample2.c:
Linking Sample2.exe:
Linker Error : Undefined Symbol _f1 in module Sample2.c
Can anybody help me on this regard?
Upvotes: 4
Views: 5277
Reputation: 11998
Turbo C really is quite an old product ; you might want to consider an upgrade.
In the C world, you need to compile your individual C files into object files, and then link the object files together. I haven't used Turbo C, but I would guess that there is some mechanism to "add file to project" or something like that to associate multiple files.
Also, while what you have is perfectly legal, on any real product I highly recommend making a header file instead of using extern
. With a header file you can declare the same prototype and include it in both .c files, and the compiler will be able to warn you if your prototype doesn't exactly match your function declaration. As you currently have it written, you might won't catch a mistake in the function's arguments, and you would get hard-to-diagnose behavior from that.
Upvotes: 3
Reputation: 7586
You must compile these two and link them into the same program, was that what you did?
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 31233
Upvotes: 5
Reputation: 13028
Are you linking both object files together? What is the command line for the linker?
Upvotes: 1