I am trying to establish equality of three equal variables, but the following code is not printing the obvious true answer which it should print. Can someone explain, how the compiler is parsing the given if condition internally?
#include<stdio.h>
int main()
{
int i = 123, j = 123, k = 123;
if ( i == j == k)
printf("Equal\n");
else
printf("NOT Equal\n");
return 0;
}
Output:
manav@workstation:~$ gcc -Wall -pedantic calc.c
calc.c: In function ‘main’:
calc.c:5: warning: suggest parentheses around comparison in operand of ‘==’
manav@workstation:~$ ./a.out
NOT Equal
manav@workstation:~$
EDIT:
Going by the answers given below, is the following statement okay to check above equality?
if ( (i==j) == (j==k))
i == jhas the same value asj == k. What happens fori = 1,j = 2,k = 3? Don't guess, try to figure it out: for example, what is the value of1 == 2? – Alok Jan 28 '10 at 15:11