Hi all ... can someone explain this to me: for(; val && i ; --i, val /= base) buf[i] = "0123456789abcdef"[val % base]; I know what it does but I just don't understand how
21 If there are fewer initializers in a brace-enclosed list than there are elements or members of an aggregate, or fewer characters in a string literal used to initialize an array of known size than there are elements in the array, the remainder of the aggregate shall be initialized implicitly the same as objects that have static storage duration.
static char buf[32] = {0}; is the same as static char buf[32] = "";, it will initialize every single character to 0; however, static char buf[32]; would also be initialized to contain all 0.
@AnttiHaapala You did not read my answer fully. Undefined behaviour does not mean completely unpredictable behaviour for any particular implementation. Try running the first example with your compiler (you'll need to ensure stdout is flushed after calling Test) and it will most likely print "world". — JeremyP22 mins ago
ooops I missed the i+1 in the returned address to the buff string array
thanks for the patience ... now it's clearer why did the author start out with a 32 element array ? to allow for converting a 32bit integer into a 32 character array ?
but then there's no space left for the null terminator !
I was surprized gcc didn not complain about returning an address to a local variable unknown to main. .... but I'm no developer (just sysadmin) so I just said to myself that it;s odd
The committee is entitled to their own opinion, and even if all the implementations behave the same, the question of whether something is UB or not, is still conditional
According to this post an indeterminate value is:
3.17.2
1 indeterminate value
either an unspecified value or a trap representation
According to google, the definition of indeterminate is:
Not certain, known, or established
Left doubtful; vague.
According to thefreedictionary, determinable...
1 indeterminate value either an unspecified value or a trap representation
1 unspecified value valid value of the relevant type where this International Standard imposes no requirements on which value is chosen in any instance
1 The semantic descriptions in this International Standard describe the behavior of an abstract machine in which issues of optimization are irrelevant.
what the standard says is that the behaviour needs to be the same as it would be if it ran in the abstract machine.
but the reads and writes to non-volatile variables need not occur, if it can be guaranteed that they're not needed - one can optimize them out.
but reads and writes to volatile variables must be strictly writes to and from memory.
> Unlike memset, any call to the memset_s function shall be evaluated strictly according to the rules of the abstract machine as described in (5.1.2.3). That is, any call to the memset_s function shall assume that the memory indicated by s and n may be accessible in the future and thus must contain the values indicated by c.
Optimizers may look at a memset call and deduce that the object in the call will never be accessed after, and remove the call to memset.