After half an hour of research on the Internet, I couldn't find any reasoned discussion of the advantages of function prototyping.
I manage in Java/Android, and am beginning a C course. Prototyping looks cumbersome compared to my previous experience, and I would like to know the reason(s) why it still exists in 2013.
I understand that life was more difficult for Ritchie and pals; however, a compiler could be written today that would generate a list of functions in a first pass, then do its usual thing using that list of functions as a current compiler would use a header file.
It probably can't persist either only because of backwards compatibility. It would be feasible to create a compiler that could switch between current operation mode, and the hypothetical new mode I just described, depending on the code it is shown.
If prototyping persists, it must therefore have an interest for the programmer, not for the compiler programmer. Am I right or wrong - and where can I find a reasoned discussion of the advantages of function prototyping vs. no prototyping?
interfacething you Java guys have? – Bo Persson Jan 22 at 15:13