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c - literal constant vs variable in math library

So, I know that in C you need to link the code to the math library, libm, to be able to use its functions. Today, while I was trying to demonstrate this to a friend, and explain why you need to do this, I came across the following situation that I do not understand.

Consider the following code:

#include <math.h>
#include <stdio.h>

/* #define VARIABLE */

int main(void)
{
#ifdef VARIABLE
    double a = 2.0;
    double b = sqrt(a);
    printf("b = %lf
",b);
#else
    double b = sqrt(2.0);
    printf("b = %lf
",b);
#endif
    return 0;
}

If VARIABLE is defined, you need to link against libm as you would normally expect; otherwise you get the usual main.c:(.text+0x29): undefined reference to sqrt linking error indicating that the compiler cannot find the definition for the function sqrt. I was surprised to see that if I comment #define VARIABLE, the code runs fine and the result is correct!

Why is it that I need to link to libm when variables are used but I don't need to do so when literal constants are used? How does the compiler find the definition of sqrt when the library is not linked? I'm using gcc 4.4.5 under linux.

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GCC can do constant folding for several standard-library functions. Obviously, if the function is folded at compile-time, there is no need for a run-time function call, so no need to link to libm. You could confirm this by taking a looking at the assembler that the compiler produces (using objdump or similar).

I guess these optimizations are only triggered when the argument is a constant expression.


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