In C++11, we know that std::string is guaranteed to be both contiguous and null-terminated (or more pedantically, terminated by charT(), which in the case of char is the null character 0).
There is this C API I need to use that fills in a string by pointer. It writes the whole string + null term...
Since the committee already went out of its way to make strings contiguous buffers so that C APIs could directly write to them, why didn’t they also make the null termination writeable? It seems a bit short-sighted
@CatPlusPlus Well not a “discussion” as in the “all discussions on SO are evil” kind of sense. A technical discussion.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Wel Nicol is obviously dealing with a C API which writes a complete string, including null termination. Which, by the way, isn’t at all uncommon
@Konrad I think your hypothetical implementation is not allowed.
@Konrad how does that implementation maintain the requirements of data? ("Returns: A pointer p such that p + i == &operator[](i) for each i in [0,size()]") — R. Martinho Fernandes58 secs ago
@KonradRudolph backward compatibility of spec. the contiguous string buffer was voted into the working draft at lillehammer in 2004, IIRC. at that time all known implementations had contiguous buffer, but the spec allowed for non-contiguous, and didn't require storage for null-terminator. the null-terminator for indexing was up to then only required for const string.
@Cheersandhth.-Alf But it isn’t backwards compatible anyway, is it? And if by 2004 all known implementations used contiguous buffers then certainly they also all used writeable null terminators, no?
The issue of whether the null-terminator was present in the buffers of all extant implementation was raised by Andrei Alexandrescu in clc++m, I think sometime earlier than the new spec :-) As I recall it was never resolved, nobody knew. So there was no knowledge that it was present everywhere
but the basic idea behind Hell++ is a Standard-conformant C++ compiler which goes out of it's way to be as unfriendly and surprising and annoying as possible
@R.MartinhoFernandes Factually, I had never heard of it before now. I must have missed every time it's been mentioned. And searching chat history through Google seems to indicate it's been mentioned quite a few times.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Hehe - this nightmare-implementation occurred to me too. It's obviously a stupid idea because of all the extra code required for little/no gain, but still.. I suspect that the committee just could not be bothered to put in a 'don't overwrite the null with an API except with another null so that you don't turn a string into a non-string'.
Uhoh. The ICT department found out I 'accidentally' botched McAfee enterprise virusscan on my development 'workstation'. Hmmm. Will have to re-enable it unless I want them to come and reimage the entire desktop...
Oh well it was fun while it lasted. Only ~16 months :)
@TonyTheLion Not nearly as slow as the workstation with virusscanning enabled, I fear. However, we have managed to arrange an exception for the work tree locations, since then. Also, I put that location on (my own) SSD. So I'll give them a fair chance and see whether I can get it into a workable situation
I never run any virusscan. Well, I occasionally (~10x per year) run something through ClamAV or some online thingie when I really want to try some dirty download
Soddin' AV on-access scans kaspersky.. takes 12 times longer to open IDE with the scan on. PAy ££££ for fast i7 and it spends most time running one bit of software checking another bit of software. Then morons come on SO asking for help with illegal hacking etc.
@MartinJames Especially cool since 99% of the things being checked are locally developed things. That have been checked 1000's if times previously the same day
@R.MartinhoFernandes filtering chat search by userid seems completely broken... It takes ages (about ~3 weeks now), and I frequently get Keyboard Cat telling 'something went wrong'. Hell yes
@R.MartinhoFernandes Yeah, 40hrs/week is pretty common in Germany, also those with strong unions or those working in the public sector often work 38.5hrs/week or some unholy number just like that. I, OTOH, have never had a contract for more than 30hrs (except for when I did a practical semester during my studies), and have been working 4days/week for half a decade.
@TonyTheLion Why do you want to know? It's one of the derived classes behind base, whichever it is. That's what OO is all about. Also, the static type is base, the dynamic type will be some_derived.
For 1.5 years, I had to get up at 0530, but only on Mondays. During the week, we were on shifts so, when the alarm clock went off, I had no idea what day it was or, often, where I was. It's really annoying to get out of bed and walk into a door that was not there in the previous hotel.
Winter Monday mornings were the worst. Pick up two other engineers and drive to MAN to board a fridge-with-wings to go to Edinburgh. Often, we would be bussed out only to find that the de-icer truck and/or the crew had not yet arrived. When we did get off, breakfast was pale, lukewarm 'coffee' and a small pack of ginger biscuits. Convicts were treated better, (but we did get paid:).
Sensible shoes sound too javaesque. In fact it goes nicely with 'javaesque', don't you think? (Buy them at a SensibleFactoryBoutiqueProxy) — sehe13 secs ago
@TonyTheLion Well, there's a sort of 'lump'. Past the lump, when you're forced into a bit of assembler, it can get easier. Loading the program counter register with 0, or actually calling 0, is is not usually a problem at that level:)
@TonyTheLion 'In order to simulate turning power on, we had to devise a C statement that would call this subroutine explicitly' - calling or jumping to the hardware start address does not simulate turning on the power on almost any embedded device. Force-firing the watchdog timer with a 'while(1);' loop is the most common restart mechanism.
@TonyTheLion Sadly, yes. My current nightmare has ARM7, Z80, 6808 and a few PIC's and PALs. The PC software is fairly easy, (mod. the unicode internationalization shit).
@Cheersandhth.-Alf Sure did:) It was quite a bit of an improvement for its day, which was a long, long time ago. Unfortunately, this Z80 etc. stuff is like an anchor chain wrapped round my neck((