If I just do it: Ex1:
#include <iostream>
int main()
{
//try to call doSomething function
doSomething();
}
void doSomething()
{
std::cout << "Call me now!" << std::endl;
}
I get compilation error! Because the compile doesn´t know what is "doSomething".
But if I change the position of doSomething to come in first place, the program compiles successfully. Ex2:
#include <iostream>
void doSomething()
{
std::cout << "Call me now!" << std::endl;
}
int main()
{
//try to call doSomething function
doSomething();
}
I can declare prototype to be like this: Ex3:
#include <iostream>
void doSomething(void);
int main()
{
//try to call doSomething function
doSomething();
}
void doSomething()
{
std::cout << "Call me now!" << std::endl;
}
But why the first example does not work? Why I even have to declare a prototype or call functions first and main function at last?
Thanks!

voidin the function argument list is not necessary for C++; writingvoid doSomething();is equivalent tovoid doSomething(void);. In C (don't know if this applies to C99) the first indicates a function that can take an unspecified number of arguments but in C++ it means that the function does not accept any arguments. – Praetorian Nov 20 '11 at 3:20