I saw a special definition of main() function, and I don't know how it is defined in this way? I haven't seen this style before.
main (m1,s) char *s;
{
}
I don't understand this way of defining a function.
Complete code
#include "stdio.h"
#define e 3
#define g (e/e)
#define h ((g+e)/2)
#define f (e-g-h)
#define j (e*e-g)
#define k (j-h)
#define l(x) tab2[x]/h
#define m(n,a) ((n&(a))==(a)) //if n==a then the m(n,a)==1 else m(n,a)==0
long tab1[]={ 989L, 5L, 26L, 0L, 88319L, 123L, 0L, 9367L }; //L means It is a long integer literal.
int tab2[] = { 4,6,10,14,22,26,34,38,46,58,62,74,82,86};
main (m1,s) char *s; {
int a,b,c,d,o[k],n = (int)s;
if (m1==1){char b[2*j+f-g]; main (l(h+e)+h+e,b); printf(b);}
else switch (m1-=h){
case f:
a = (b=(c=(d=g)<<g)<<g)<<g;
return(m(n,a|c)|m(n,b)|m(n,a|d)|m(n,c|d));
case h:
for (a=f;a<j;++a)if(tab1[a]&&!(tab1[a]%((long)l(n))))return(a);
case g:
if(n<h)return(g);
if (n<j){n-=g;c='D';o[f]=h;o[g]=f;}
else {c='\r'-'\b';n-=j-g;o[f]=o[g]=g;}
if ((b=n)>=e)for (b=g<<g;b<n;++b)o[b]=o[b-h]+o[b-g]+c;
return (o[b-g]%n+k-h);
default:
if (m1-=e) main (m1-g+e+h, s+g); else * (s+g)=f;
for (*s=a=f; a<e;) *s=(*s<<e)|main(h+a++,(char *)m1);
}
}
This is K&R C Style. Which predates ANSI and ISO C89.
K&R C (and C89) uses implicit
int, if a type is not givenintis implied, so in your examplem1has the typeint. In K&R C the types of the parameter are given after, in your case the parametersis declared aschar *. The implicitintis also used for the return type, so if a function definition has no return type is given, it isint, like it does for yourmainfunction.That gives you the prototype
int main(int m1, char *s);for yourmain()function. However,main()normally, in hosted environments, expects either no parameters (int main (void);) or aintwith an array of pointers tocharor equivalent (int main (int, char **);). POSIX also acceptint main (int, char **, char **);. Most freestanding environments normally expect eitherint main(void);orvoid main(void);. Your prototype does not fit any of this (nor any other ones i know of), and seems wrong. Where is it used?See also: Alternative (K&R) C syntax for function declaration versus prototypes
Edit
After seeing that it is from obfuscated code, that just prints
"hallo world!\n", and doesn't accept arguments: The prototypeint main(int m1, char *s);for main is not standard in ISO C or any other C environment i know. And the program breaks when you pass too many arguments. However, when no argument is given, thechar *sparameter is only used when called from within the program, and then the typechar *works. This isn't good practice (quite the opposite, but i guess that was the goal).