Arrays can be dynamically allocated and the standard does not even mention using a stack or heap; these are implementation details (and there are implementations which don't use either)
I'd be careful about MattMcNaab; I have my fights with him, too, but I consider him to be very deeply into the language and standard.
@QPaysTaxes Don't mix implementation and standard! They are different abstractions and unless explicitly required, one should always stick to the highest possible abstraction, i.e. the C standard. Anything else will indeed confuse beginners.
@QPaysTaxes M.M. (he changed his nick ca. 1 year or so ago)
@QPaysTaxes I thought it was clear from the context. Anyway, with all due respect, but it does not look very good for you
Your problem is the effective type rule: Consider int (*a)[10] = malloc(sizeof(*a) * 10);. The first write to the allocated object via the pointer establishes the type. Note that "object" is C is not the same as in OOPLs!
@QPaysTaxes Maybe, but this is one of the the most missunderstood and underestimated rule of the whole standard. Even many experienced programmers don't comprehend all its implications.
Anyway, it must be "let's call everything a 2D array" day for the C tag. I had easily 10+ questions with something like int ** or even int * calling it 2D array ...
@QPaysTaxes You've reviewed 40 posts today (of which 2 were audits), thanks! The time between your first and last review today was 2 hours, 7 minutes, and 15 seconds, averaging to a review every 3 minutes and 10 seconds.
Sure, but that just means you are holding assumptions about the code that are not correct. You need to figure out what those assumptions are and debug the code to see what actually happens.
For some values of "works", though - the walls still do weird stuff when they get close to the camera plane, but at least they are attached to their ends now.
well to be fair users often do just copy encoded stuff, maybe if they copy a warning to not use it then when they paste it they will see it and be like "oh, hm"
whereas they may never even see the unencoded prose warning
I know it sounds cruel but I'm in the camp that after I tell you once to not touch the stove because its hot I'll let you touch it the next time so you really learn that it is hot.
@TylerH I wont stop others as well. I just am tired of all the hand holding. Let people make mistakes, its how you learn. In fact I think I learn more from my mistakes.