Difference between i = ++i and ++i [duplicate]-Collection of common programming errors

Writing i = ++i; writes to variable i twice (one for the increment, one for the assignment) without a sequence point between the two. This, according to the C language standard causes undefined behavior.

This means the compiler is free to implement i = ++i as identical to i = i + 1, as i = i + 2 (this actually makes sense in certain pipeline- and cache-related circumstances), or as format C:\ (silly, but technically allowed by the standard).

Originally posted 2013-11-09 23:22:50.