SPNU118Z September 1995 – March 2023 66AK2E05 , 66AK2H06 , 66AK2H12 , 66AK2H14 , AM1705 , AM1707 , AM1802 , AM1806 , AM1808 , AM1810 , AM5K2E04 , C346BA02 , C348A01 , CS241C01-Q1 , CS241C05-Q1 , CS246C01-Q1 , CS348C02-Q1 , OMAP-L132 , OMAP-L137 , OMAP-L138 , S470AV336LYSQRB , TMS470R1A288 , TMS470R1A384 , TMS470R1A64 , TMS470R1B1M , TMS470R1B512 , TMS470R1B768
C/C++ source code may need to refer to symbols that are defined by the linker, not in C/C++ source code. For linker-defined symbols that act like a function or array, you can often refer to such symbols in a straightforward way in C/C++ code. For other purposes in C/C++ code, you typically need to use other techniques, such as the _symval operator, to access linker-defined symbols. These techniques are described in the subsections that follow.