I am defining an array of size 9. but when I access the array index 10 it is not giving any error.
int main() {
bool* isSeedPos = new bool[9];
isSeedPos[10] = true;
}
I expected to get a compiler error, because there is no array element isSeedPos[10] in my array.
Why don't I get an error?
Buffer overflow protection refers to various techniques used during software development to enhance the security of executable programs by detecting buffer overflows on stack-allocated variables as they occur and preventing them from becoming serious security vulnerabilities. There have been several implementations of buffer overflow protection.
This article deals with stack-based overflow; similar protections also exist against heap-based overflows, but they are implementation-specific.
How it works
Typically, buffer overflow protection modifies the organization of data in the stack ...
How does this "read only" memory work that makes your program die if you try to write to it? Perhaps one could mark some memory surrounding the array as read-only...
> Canaries or canary words are known values that are placed between a buffer and control data on the stack to monitor buffer overflows. When the buffer overflows, the first data to be corrupted will be the canary, and a failed verification of the canary data is therefore an alert of an overflow, which can then be handled, for example, by invalidating the corrupted data.
> A recurring theme brought up was how hard regular expressions are to deal with. Not necessarily creating them - you can do a lot by just knowing the basics - but dealing with them after they've been written. As they mentioned on the show, your source code ends up looking like a cartoon character swearing, which is the likely response you'll get from the poor maintenance developer that has to deal with it. Regular expressions are often referred to as a "write-only" language.
well, even if the translation was good, it's still so counter-productive because it prevents you from getting anything useful by googling the error message
True. Plus, the fact that I understand french casual language doesn't mean I understand french C++ talk. Documentation and books in native languages are very rare.
@jalf quite a few of them, I just opened your profile and started reading answers you'd given to questions randomly. Some nice one's, which I upvoted :)
@jalf I also learned almost everything (useful) about C++ beyond the most basic syntactic constructions by just participating on SO and reading better people's answers
How does a C++ reference look,
memory-wise?
It doesn't. The C++ standard only says how it should behave, not how it should be implemented.
In the general case, compilers usually implement references as pointers. But they generally have more information about what a reference may point to,...
> ?? | Makes the preceding item optional. Lazy, so the optional item is excluded in the match if possible. This construct is often excluded from documentation because of its limited use.
Just learned another way to make regexes even less readable :P
Inception is just a dying delusion experienced by the character of Titanic!
It all fits in!
> I want to store all of the variables into one massive "Parameters.h" file so that I can access them from anywhere in my application. Each sub-page has it's own source and header file.