I used to get updated with these earlier, so remember a little bit
trying to get it again
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@ColdFire It's a popular tag, posted in mostly by people whose English isn't their first (or second) language, who don't bother reading how to ask because it's too difficult for them (I'm not sarcastic)
@TGMCians You've reviewed 40 posts today (of which 1 was an audit), thanks! The time between your first and last review today was 24 minutes and 19 seconds, averaging to a review every 36 seconds.
@QPaysTaxes - After looking at your question, I am having deja vu and amnesia at the same time. I have a feeling that I've forgotten the answer to that question before
@QPaysTaxes Typically use malloc if you are going to fill the space as why do 2 writes. Use calloc if you need the data zero initialized before you use it.
@QPaysTaxes If calloc and malloc cannot allocate enough memory then they return NULL. If the allocation succeeds then calloc will not go past the end of the array when zeroing.
@QPaysTaxes Oh. calloc takes a size_t which is a unsigned integer type. overflowing that is well defined and what it does is wraps back around. So if you add 1 to the max size_t value then you get 0, if you instead add 2 you get 1, and so on.
The standard has nothing to say about it. My gut says you would have the same behavior as doing a malloc and a memset so no checking and the array you get will not be the right size.
generally you do not get safety checks in C and C++ as that is overhead. If you want the overhead then write a function to do it for you.
@QPaysTaxes: If malloc & friends return a null pointer (NULL is a macro with a _null pointer constant, which can be a different value actually), there is no use in further error checking. Just take it as allocation failure.
Problem is "optimistic/opertunistic allocation". malloc may even succeed without actually allocating memory (RAM resp. swap). On modern OS, the pages will be allocated on access only. If at that time there are no pages available, the access fails, although malloc succeeded. So, basically: check for a null pointer after malloc, but be prepared to fail lateron. If that is not suitable, you have to access the object (whcih can be harder than it sounds, because of compiler optimisations).
:-) - not necessarily. calloc might use an OS feature to zero-out the pages on first access. So you end up the same as malloc actually.
(I know why I prefer bare-metal embedded and my one memory allocation mechanisms:-)
@ColdFire A real fun thing to try and do is zero out a object after you are done with it. Optimizers are so good they see you will never use it again and just get rid of the code on you.
@Tunaki: To me "not full control" includes "no control at all". I wasn't exactly sure about Java, my knowledge about configuration options for that language is close to zero (approaching from -INF actually :-)
Serious question actually. I've never done anything with Java. I learned vanilla C in college (where we had to call malloc) and haven't done much with a core language
But if I'd use a language other than C (speed and full control) and C++ (comfort and speed), it was Python (comfort and abstraction, including full OOP in various ways) actually.
@ColdFire: Java is a chimera. Not suitable for bare-metal embedded, where C (C++ for larger MCUs/SoCs) is the languge of choice. On the PC, where speed does not matter, Python is far better as it provides higher abstraction than C++/Java/C#/etc.
And the code is better comprehensible, even for non-Python programmers.
Well, as I wrotre, I'm not into Java, so I'm not aware about all (new) features, just the basics. Anyway, you can hardly add members to an object, use template-based OOP instead of inheritance, etc. Those are closely related to Python's duck-typing approach.
@Braiam: Well, that is the basis for higher abstraction, including meta-programming. I still have to completely comprehend all implications, but from my experience, every time I need a specific feature in my Python code, I find someone already thought about it and provides an easy way to implement. E.g. dynamically adding methods to an object (but not its class) from a config-file included at run-time.
@Tunaki: It is very useful e.g. for a build-system with CASE features and a lot of other stuff. I didn't say I'd allow this for code run by unreliable ppl. Of couse you have to write your code to evaluate external files at run-time, so the programmer has full control as he should.
Yet all audits state typical Python code has not more flaws/errors than other language's code. But most ppl coming from statically typed languages have problems with dynamic typing. Don't forget: Python also allows deeper introspection, etc. than other languages due to these (and other) features.
But then, I'd not use Python for bare-metal, even iff the performance would suffice.