According to Google,
void/void/Adjective:Not valid or legally binding.Noun:A completely empty space: "the black void of space".
Verb:Declare that (something) is not valid or legally binding: "the Supreme Court voided the statute".
According to me, that sounds about right. If you want a definition I made up then, Void(noun): A non-existent hole in space. (However, I'm sure Google's answer is more valid and much more descriptive than my definition)
void basically signifies that the method will not have a return value.
The void (if it exists) does not, by definition, have substance. It cannot contain matter, energy, or any other form thereof. A null void is defined and described by this exact lacking.
Zero or more. Note: if zero, write void: int foo (void)
Example: int main (void) { puts ("Here is a function definition"); return 0; }
Void as in vacuum, empty space vide (said like veed) void as in no-good nul void as in cancelled annule
The void was very dark and scary.
Some words with "void" as a root word include avoid, devoid, and avoidable.
She had to void the check because the amount was wrong. They asked to void the agreement. When her boyfriend broke up with her, it left a huge void in her life.
declaration examples:int main (void);extern int somevariable;definition examples:int main (void) { puts ("Hello world"); return 0; }int somevariable;
When her father died, it left a huge void in her heart. There was a void in the ground, making it impossible to cross on foot. He declared the will null and void.
A function can call other functions (or itself), but a function-definition cannot be nested in another function-definition: int main (void) { void wont_compile (void) { puts ("Won't compile"); } wont_compile (); return 0; }
It might be void