Post-increment and pre-increment within a 'for' loop produce same output

After evaluating i++ or ++i, the new value of i will be the same in both cases. The difference between pre- and post-increment is in the result of evaluating the expression itself.

++i increments i and evaluates to the new value of i.

i++ evaluates to the old value of i, and increments i.

The reason this doesn't matter in a for loop is that the flow of control works roughly like this:

  1. test the condition
  2. if it is false, terminate
  3. if it is true, execute the body
  4. execute the incrementation step

Because (1) and (4) are decoupled, either pre- or post-increment can be used.


Well, this is simple. The above for loops are semantically equivalent to

int i = 0;
while(i < 5) {
    printf("%d", i);
    i++;
}

and

int i = 0;
while(i < 5) {
    printf("%d", i);
    ++i;
}

Note that the lines i++; and ++i; have the same semantics FROM THE PERSPECTIVE OF THIS BLOCK OF CODE. They both have the same effect on the value of i (increment it by one) and therefore have the same effect on the behavior of these loops.

Note that there would be a difference if the loop was rewritten as

int i = 0;
int j = i;
while(j < 5) {
    printf("%d", i);
    j = ++i;
}

int i = 0;
int j = i;
while(j < 5) {
    printf("%d", i);
    j = i++;
}

This is because in first block of code j sees the value of i after the increment (i is incremented first, or pre-incremented, hence the name) and in the second block of code j sees the value of i before the increment.