@QPaysTaxes Use a temporary pointer for that! Check it and only x = temp_x if you really got the block realloced!
@JAL There is no such requirement or how realloc works by the standard. It is completely a matter of your implementation. Often you have some overcommittment for malloc/realloc(NULL, ..) so a later enlargement via realloc will not move the block.
Semantically realloc is allocate buffer, memcopy to the new buffer, delete the old buffer. Now it could just grow the buffer but if it can't that is what you get
@NathanOliver No, it is not! Read the standard: port70.net/~nsz/c/c11/n1570.html#7.22.3.5 it does not mention copying, nor is that the common behaviour. Briefly: you cannot rely on the pointer neither to change nor to be the same.
@Olaf It specifies copying with The contents of the new object shall be the same as that of the old object prior to deallocation, up to the lesser of the new and old sizes
Ah. Well that is an implementation thing but most do. There will be some kind of copy though.
Yeah not really. I'm just trying to say the buffer is copied.
@NathanOliver That does not imply copying. But yes, the first part is missleading and it should possibly be rephrased. Deallocation refers to that the object temporarily is not available, e.g. for multithreading (C11 introduced thread-support to the language)
If I was writting an answer I would use words like that. In chat saying memcopy was just easier ;)
@Olaf It reads to m that the new buffer will have the contents of the old buffer. You might be able to do that without copying but essentially that is what we get
@QPaysTaxes There was mentioned copying. Anyway, I think you got the idea.
@NathanOliver The problem is, if you consider volatile qualified memory blocks allocated this way. Copy-semantics would imply observable behaviour outside, which is exactly what the standard does not state. By leaving this open, it effectively says: "don't rely on anything".
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We have like 500k questions in c++, a language that's exhaustively defined in a 1.4k sites standard document plus some references to the much shorter C standard. Everything that's not a dupe is too broad, unclear or off-topic, plus a small amount of questions about niche libraries or setups.
IKR. We have a complex system to determine lead times for our product. Has to take into account weekends and holidays. I get heartburn every time someone find another edge case for it
Reminds me of when I was an IT intern and high school and the actual employees used to play red alert. You could hear the swearing from the cubicles as people ganged up on each other
@BaummitAugen Towns often have "Stadtdirektoren" (town director). The Burgermeister is the representative and the director the chief of administration.
@NathanOliver It is, but also quite exact: the "Oberbürgermeister" is the Boss of multiple "Bürgermeister". "Ober" in German can mean something like "(team)leader".
@Machavity Yes, I really was not sure I should be amused or offended. I did not even flag the answer when I commented forst, but that reply effectively forced me to.
Apparently, the word Bezirgsbürgermeister is only used in Berlin and NRW (where I live). In other parts, they may be Bezirksvorsteher or Bezirksvorsteher or something else.
@NathanOliver Have a look at Berlin: There are "Bezirks_bürgermeister". A "Bezirk" is a part of the town (maybe like a district). And the Oberbürgermeister is the major of the whole town. But no, one Bürgermeister can only be for one town (not sure if it is technically possible to be voted Bürgermeister for multiple towns).
@QPaysTaxes schlagen: to beat, to hit (depends on context), even to whip. In Germany we say "Schlagsahne" which literally translates to "whipped cream".
@BaummitAugen DonauDampfSchiffFahrtsKapitänsPatent" (camel case only to show the single words)
@QPaysTaxes Yes. In Germany. Austria and Switzerland have a lot of different names and also grammar rules. You can get along with regular German in these countries, but be prepared for missunderstandings.
@QPaysTaxes to drive. What's funny about that? ... (retorical question :-P
@QPaysTaxes You will get along with German in my part of the world much better than with Python or JavaScript, though
@QPaysTaxes Not really. It would make things worse. Homan languages are OOP: you can extend a meaning and overload the same word with different semantics even.
@NathanOliver Icons and point&click might work best
C has too much undefined behaviour. Ideal language for politicians: "not my fault if the environment (aka the people) undestand my phrases differently than what I meant".
@NathanOliver Some like GUIs, some Guys, Some Gals, some Pals. Who cares?
@NathanOliver It defines a lot of behaviour as undefined.
Does JS have a single precision? I'd actually expect it always uses double at least (Python e.g. does). If it defines the precision, range, etc. of floats at all.
@QPaysTaxes Sounds like that Lua-Nonsense. No integers, all floats. Ridiculous. I prefer the Python way: arbitrary length integers plus double precision floats.
This question has a horribly formatted code block. Is editing it to be properly format thus revealing that it is a serious formatting typo appropriate?