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22:47
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Q: Cramming data into a single statement

samuelbrody1249Take the following word-count program I have, where a word is (naively) taken as alnums between whitespace: #include<stdio.h> #include<ctype.h> #include<stdbool.h> int main(void) { // grab a segment of text until EOF int current_char; int num_words=0, num_chars=0, num_lines=0; // ign...

Cramming as much code in one line is what you do for the IOCCC. In all other cases, go for readability. Your maintenance programmer colleague will bless thy name forever.
in_word-- on a boolean variable? Good lord.
I'd be more concerned about logical errors, such as that unconditional decrement of in_word on each instance of whitespace.
Bug: if you have multiple consecutive spaces you're decrementing in_word more than once. The : in_word-- else case shouldn't be there. And syntactically, : can't be omitted from the ternary operator, showing a flaw with using it as a replacement for if.
Questions about coding style are off-topic here as they're purely opinion-based. You can probably ask this over at Code Review instead.
If you have to ask exactly what the code is doing, do you think the code is ok?
22:47
@MichaelDorgan no idea. I've been learning C now for ~3 weeks. Most of what's in there doesn't make sense to me.
@JohnKugelman I see, thanks for pointing that out. I've replaced it with a ' '.
The postgres example is an if statement that calls exactly one function. The function parameters take up space but it is only one statement so it isn't the same thing as cramming multiple statements one a single line.
M.M
M.M
Don't assume that just because a project is popular it must be a model of good coding style :)
@M.M thanks -- are there any projects you can recommend with good coding style to look at and review with a not-too-large codebase (i.e., not linux).
@JohnKugelman I don't think in_word-- is allowed at all. "5.2.6-2 The operand of postfix -- is decremented analogously to the postfix ++ operator, except that the operand shall not be of type bool." stackoverflow.com/a/3450554/2193968
M.M
M.M
@samuelbrody1249 rephial.org perhaps
22:47
in_word ? num_words++, num_lines ++, in_word-- : num_lines++; What are you trying to achieve? Code obfuscation? Use a block and a test for the next reader of your code, which may well be yourself a few days or years from now. Btw the code has undefined behavior because bool in_word; is uninitialized.
if (in_word) num_words ++; -> num_words += in_word;
in_word ? num_words++, num_lines ++, in_word-- : num_lines++; -> { num_words += in_word; in_word = 0; num_lines++; }
@JerryJeremiah: Neither C11 §6.5.2.4 Postfix increment and decrement operators nor §6.5.3.1 Prefix increment and decrement operators says anything about banning increment or decrement on variables of type _Bool (aka bool). The section number is wrong for the C standard; are you quoting C++? The question is a C++ question, and this is (yet) another reason to accept that the two languages are distinct.
num_chars should be the total number of bytes read.
@JohnKugelman: I'm afraid in_word is only decremented if it is true. This behavior is well defined. There are other problems beyond the code being unnecessarily convoluted and absconse.
is this considered bad practice to cram things into a single statement so braces can be skipped? ABSOLUTELY!
M.M
M.M
@chqrlie the original question decremented in_word when false; it's been edited
The function call ereport(ERROR, (errcode(ERRCODE_STATEMENT_TOO_COMPLEX), errmsg("too many grouping sets present (maximum 4096)"), parser_errposition(pstate, qry->groupClause ? exprLocation((Node *) qry->groupClause) : exprLocation((Node *) qry->groupingSets)))); is complex; it uses the comma operator within the argument list to ereport(), calling the functions errcode() and errmsg() and discarding those results before calling parser_errposition() and passing its return value as the second argument to ereport(). It's not particularly good style; it may be necessary.
People who cram stuff together like that are doing so out of some combination of (a) job security ("if nobody else can understand it, they can't fire me"), and (b) a self-perpetuating hazing-style mentality ("when I learned C, I had to learn to read gobbledegook like this, this is what C code looks like, so this is what I should write, and inflict on my successors").
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@SteveSummit glad to read that, it's a wave of relief from a lot of the C code I've tried to read/understand as a beginner :) Regarding the Postgres example: would you say that also fits into that category: or if not, what makes that different?
@samuelbrody1249 The Postgres example is quite different, yes. For one thing, a database engine is a large, sophisticated piece of code, so will usually use sophisticated techniques which would not necessarily be approachable to the novice. The embedded calls to errcode() and errmsg() are obviously part of a scheme to centrally manage error codes and messages, which is a real issue in big programs and so deserves a more heavyweight solution.
A good illustration of Kernighan's Law of debugging: Debugging is twice as hard as writing the code in the first place. Therefore, if you write the code as cleverly as possible, you are, by definition, not smart enough to debug it.
The embedded ternary expression involving qry->groupClause, making the second call to the embedded parser_errposition function conditional, is borderline. I've written code like that, but today I'm less inclined to. But all of the "sophistication" in the Postgres example follows recognizable idioms and is easy enough to read (if you're experienced enough), whereas the "complexity" in the word-count fragment is gratuitous, confusing, and justifiably castigated as "obfuscation".
Developers who follow such practices shoukd be tortured by being forced to test and debug their own code, with the option to choose death after six months.

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