@jalf I recently had a panicky kind of restore job to do. I was very fond of my foresight to map /etc /home and /home/username/Documents to different partitions.
but first, you could pre-allocate a buffer large enough to hold the normal return value, and an object of each possible exception type, and you could pass it in
and then, you could use the return code to indicate which object type is within the buffer when the function returns
and then, you could write a trivial inline function executed on the client which would perform the conversion between "object in a buffer" and "normal thrown exception"
On Windows, it is just for show. Microsoft does not consider UAC to be security. They have no problem with the many "workarounds" people have demonstrated for someone on an admin account with UAC enabled to either disable UAC, or do things which require admin privileges without getting an UAC prompt
Check the blog they ran during Win7's development. People repeatedly called out UAC "flaws", and Microsoft again and again said "UAC is not designed as a security boundary, and so, it is not a security flaw if you can bypass it"
so you're arguing that instead of simply exposing a standard API which all compilers can call, they should add a set of language extensions that allow you to call a C api and have the result automagically turned into an exception?
And yet you were complaining about the API design. Now you're saying the API should stay the same, but the compiler should autogenerate some calling code
Now you're saying that instead, it should..... return HRESULT error codes, and then on the user side, some code should be written to turn that into an exception
@jalf If you're in C, then you can just read the object directly. If you're in a different compiler, then that compiler is what compiles the throw statement, there's no boundary-crossing exceptions going on
@rubenvb There are some fundamental requirements for using a C API, and that is one of them, yes.
And honestly, I don't see why it would be "simpler" or "easier" to check an "exception object" and then free a string after every call, instead of simply checking an error code
Again, what is gained by this? What does it give me that I can't get just as easily with the current API, which gives me an error code, a function to convert the error code into a string, and perhaps a function for getting the error message for the last error that occurred?
Well, once again, even assuming that such a proprietary language extension, making it harder for portable code to call the API, is a good idea, how exactly would changing the API itself help? Everything you want to know can be automatically retrieved/generated in a much simpler manner
@DeadMG And I'll ask again: what should it contain? You're the one complaining about getting a HRESULT and the ability to query for an error message string. So what do you want instead?
what I'd like is instead of INVALID_CALL something along the lines of "You specified a 60Hz refresh rate, but Windowed mode devices must have the refresh rate set to 0."
and I seem to recall that GetLastError() works with D3D stuff too. Have you tried that?
@DeadMG how is it the same thing?
You started out saying they should completely change the API, so that it returns fundamentally different data types. Now you're merely saying "I want a descriptive error message"
Compilers for languages which offer exception handling could just as well retrieve the error message through the current API, wrap it in an exception object, and throw that
nothing there requires the API to change
@DeadMG Which part of "you can get an error message string from the current API" confuses you?
@DeadMG And you still haven't said what else it should be. I asked you twice what you'd want in that object, and both times, you said "a better error message"
So you're saying that 20 years ago, before C++ was standardized, and before Microsoft had a compiler which implemented C++ exceptions, they should have changed the API into something even you don't know what should be, just so the compiler could autogenerate a bit of wrapper code which can be just as easily generated for the current API
Are you really wondering why no one else thinks that makes sense?
@jalf No, what I'm saying is that what I'm describing is a generic solution for any API
and is a lot more worth the time and effort to automate than a solution for one single API
@jalf Curiously, DXGetErrorDescription doesn't get any results on MSDN, and I've not seen it referred to in any tutorial or documentation, but my global namespace does seem to include it.
not that it returns anything more useful than INVALID_CALL, though
there is one subtle thing. in some cases a sub-API defines a message resource in a DLL, and you can give that to FormatMessage. e.g. as I recall RAS API does/did that. and some network stuff.
it is like a hidden corner of Windows. there is a special message compiler to create such resources, and they support internationalization and are used for the event log. and none of it is very well documented, if at all.
@DeadMG āI never seriously contemplatedā ā¦ out of interest, why not? Did you want to write the parser manually or did/do you use another parser generator, and why?
@KonradRudolph It's kind of a meme to change the tagline several times a week. The only thing that's archiving it is the messages that appear when it's changed.
room topic changed to Lounge<C++>: The Robot knows it all. [c++] [c++11] [c++-faq]
They adhere to a certain scheme you can search for. But since they are posted as messages from the one who changed them, he can change them after they are posted.
@StackedCrooked Darn. That's wrong!I didn't introduce the rule! I suggested we set up a rule. There was an extensive discussion, the result of which was that rule. I',m not even sure I even suggested that rule.
And, anyway, that was long before this, so it is a fake.