@louigi600 false premise. strcpy is not an "atomic bomb"
#include <string.h>
char p[10];
void setup() {
// put your setup code here, to run once:
strcpy(p, "test");
}
Sketch uses 498 bytes (1%) of program storage space. Maximum is 32,256 bytes.
@BartekBanachewicz buf[0]='E'; buf[1]='r'; buf[2]='r'; buf[3]='!'; buf="Err!"; is a lot smaller the 498 bytes nad that would be the only place I use string functions
If you're looking for an adventure, I suppose that you could write a wrapper function to unroll such char-by-char assignments, I never seen such a thing- but that's your prerogative
if anybody is curious this is the whole context of the original question I posed:
char* itoa(int val, int base)
{ static char buf[5] = { 0 };
int i = 3;
int sign;
val >= 0 ? sign = 1 : ( sign = -1);
if ( val >= (base * base * base * base) || val <= -base * base * base || base > 16 || base <= 1 )
{ buf[0]='E';
buf[1]='r';
buf[2]='r';
buf[3]='!';
return &buf[0];
}
if ( val == 0 )
{ buf[3]='0';
return &buf[3];
}
if (sign < 0 ) val = -val ;
for(; val > 0 && i >= 0 ; --i, val /= base)
It's prolly also pulling in other standard library functions used by sprintf, that you might end up using yourself. Still the wrong battle.
And as has been pointed out already, if you want to do this as an exercise, go ahead. But in real programs, stick with the standard functions until you really cannot.
so I decided that foe just once I could do without using avr-libc's vprintf ... glibc's vprintf is over 2000 lines of code ... not sure on avr-libc's implementation surely 25 linse is better then 2000 lines if I'm going to use it just once
I do. The standard C++ library stuff, to be exact.
The point is that your 25-line home remedy might work for you just fine, especially if you're not handling values from some uncontrolled source and can be sure that no odd corner cases will have to be handled.
well mycode checks that the input values are within the capabilities of the display I'm targeting ... so I think it can deal with reading crap from analogue pins
and I check that the previous statement holds true for any base my converter can handle
I used to play with pic micro-controller and I used it's native assembly language ... so I'm used to doing my own stuff. ... I'm not saying that my converter is better then vprintf ... but for my application it is
in any case my dayjob is unix sysadmin .... I do the microcontroller and programming as a hobby ... for me personal satisfaction comes before other stuff that would not hold true if I were to do it for a living
I'm sure my code is horrific to the eyes of experienced programmers ... maybe I'll get better at writing neater code over time
my fault : I do appreciate the advice and I do learn from it even if I still think that for my specific need my horrific code is better suited for what I'm targeting. But I do agree with you that if I were to get paid for this I'd have a different approach. I'd have never learned about doing something like this buf[i] = "0123456789abcdef"[val % base]; and also loops with multiple looped variables for(; val > 0 && i >= 0 ; --i, val /= base) had I not looked into doing this myself
I'm having a problem trying to replicate buffer overflow using custom shellcode, here's a link to my question in full. If anybody could take a look and explain to me what i might be doing wrong i'd appreciate it a lot. http://stackoverflow.com/questions/42934121/trying-to-craft-a-shellcode-exploit-can-anybody-spot-what-might-be-wrong-with-t