Dear Victor, Thank you for your comment. 'int i=1999' is a declaration. It does not have value to return. On the other hand 'i=1999' is an expression which has value. To make things clear, consider following expressions. int x, j; x = (int i=1999); // syntax error x = (j = 1999); // fine In this sense, cint's behavior is consistent with C++ language. I think keeping current implementation is a better solution. If we force an output for 'int i=1999' it may create inconsistency regarding C++ language processing. Thank you Masaharu Goto >Dear Masaharu, >as I understand George meant the following: > >root.exe [0] int i = 1999 // no print here >root.exe [1] i = 1999 // but we have here >(int)1999 > >Of course it is not very important. If to fix it needs less 10 minutes, >it would be good to do, if more no problem to leave it as it is. > >Victor
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