Do you mean in practice, or in the question? Because in practice, the next step is certainly inserting the order into their database; they should be using prepared statements, but I think that would be more useful information that they should not be escaping the string
I am curious about what the point of it is, given prepared statements have been around since it was
@S.S.Anne Is that like the old joke, where folks are sitting around calling out numbers and laughing, prompting a newcomer to ask what is so funny. He is told that they’re telling jokes, but everyone knows the jokes so well that they don’t bother retelling them every time; they just reference them by number. So, the newcomer tries his hand at it, calling out “number 49!” Nobody laughs. Puzzled, he asks a veteran why. He is told, “it’s all in the delivery”.
@zbee I would like to know as well. There are so many useless abused functions in MySQLi. Honestly it is a terrible extension full of bugs, poor design decisions and bad functions.
Yes. I think the original version I heard had everyone in prison, so they’d told the same old jokes so many times that they knew them by heart. They assigned each of them numbers for convenience. Clearly, these people were C programmers, who were passing jokes via reference.
I never asked why all the C programmers were in prison.
@CodyGray I heard a different version of that. In that version, the newcomer calls out "45761", and the assembled audience start hooting with laughter. Tears roll down cheeks, and one old man can hardly breathe for mirth. The newcomer asks why this one was so funny, and the answer comes back - "Ooh, that's a good one, we've not heard that one before".
@Dharman Does that actually need code? Looks like it is asking about an issue with a tool.
@NathanOliver Especially when they’re used to achieve pass-by-reference?
I got into the habit of passing everything but built in numeric types by const-reference in C++. Apparently move semantics mean I can now stop doing this, but it’s too hard to reason about most of the time.
@CodyGray It's a tough choice to make. Really everything should be written using perfect forwarding, but that makes the code only useable by TMP experts.
@NathanOliver Sometimes, where I’m passing around large vectors, I’ll provide two overloads, one taking a copy and one taking an rvalue reference, but it leads to a combinatorial explosion of overloads in all but the simplest of cases.
I am not a TMP expert. I have to look up the syntax for std::enable_if almost every time...
I think the real solution is just to fix optimizers so they can see though the way args are passed. Move semantics were a poor attempt at doing this, where what should have been behind-the-scenes details leaked into the source code.
I was super excited about concepts as a way to improve compile-time error checking (which is my holy grail: moving everything from run-time checks to compile-time checks), but I recently realized I’m already doing everything I could do with concepts via static asserts inside the function body.
Yeah, really they are just syntactic sugar for what we should already be doing. It'll help make new code smaller, but I wouldn't rewrite a code base to use them just for the sake of using them.
@S.S.Anne That kinda exists, in the form of pathological compilers. But yeah, would be very cool as a general solution. I’m not sure it is really possible, though.
@NathanOliver It's very much incomplete and can't handle a lot of cases but works for obvious stuff like abs(INT_MIN); and div(INT_MIN, -1); and (assert)(0);
How do you implement this without reflection? You link to your version of the standard library instead, which contains assertions for all UB you’ve thought to include?
stackoverflow.com/q/59947193/1843510 This question belongs on codereview SE, however that's not an option for off topic > belongs on other SE site, and other options don't fit the question. Do I vote to close as generally off-topic?
@S.S.Anne I think you are missing my point. If I invoke UB, it is too late to catch it at compile time because the compiler can compile the code however it wants.
I also don’t know how you catch UB that doesn’t involve calls to standard library functions, like shifting by a value larger than the bit width
@CodyGray I didn't say it was portable... But I plan (a long time from now) to write a compiler that can do most of the rest of the undefined behavior.
@zbee You need to have full close-vote privileges (3k reputation) in order to close for custom reasons. When you only have flagging privileges, you get a "blatantly off-topic" reason that you can choose from, which is effectively the same thing.
Please don't close a question as off-topic merely because you think it would be a better fit on Code Review. Just because a question could be asked on CR doesn't mean it is off-topic here on SO. We do allow questions about how to improve code on SO.
Also keep in mind that CR has very specific requirements for what types of questions it allows; in particular, the code needs to work as documented.
@S.S.Anne Yes, so, how do you catch UB that does not involve a call to a standard library function? There are myriad examples of this. The one I gave earlier was a bit-shift by more bits than are in the type. That's just a built-in bit-shift operator, and doesn't involve a call to a standard library function, so there's no obvious way that a stdlib replacement could "catch" that.
@Dharman CPUID is an x86 instruction. If the question is just about that, then it should not have the C++ tag. However, if the question is asking how to invoke that instruction from within the context of a C++ program (e.g., using an inline asm block), then the C++ tag is warranted.
In this case, the question doesn't seem to deserve the C++ tag, as there's no indication given in the body of the question that they're trying to do this from C++. Nor is it relevant to answering the question, since the answer would involve merely extracting information from the results of executing the CPUID instruction, which is language-agnostic.
I've seen plenty of questions posted as answers since I've started on SO, but this is the first time I've seen an answer posted as a question. What a day it has been
You've never seen that before, @Das_Geek? It happens fairly often. Folks want to share something, but they don't realize they need to pretend they're on Jeopardy!
@Dharman Can it be edited out, leaving a useful answer? If so, then no, don't flag. If the answer is irredeemably abusive, regardless of who it abuses, then yes, flag.
You...might still want to let us know with a custom flag, though, even after editing, depending on how bad the abuse is.
@dbc We don't migrate questions in languages that we cannot speak, because we have no way of determining whether they're of sufficient quality for migration. Furthermore, since it is entirely self-answered, there's no real point in migrating at all. The poster can just delete and re-post. The only reason we migrate is to preserve question and answer(s) intact, including ownership/attribution.
@Scratte Stack Overflow gets a lot of questions. You need to be patient to give experts who may be asleep time to find your question. You can increase the odds it will be seen by tagging it appropriately. Tags are how experts find questions relevant to their expertise to answer.
@Scratte I only see one failed audit from you, but yes, you did make the wrong decision there. It was an answer which only provided a link, so you should have recommended deletion
If it’s been more than 2 days with no answer, you can start a bounty on the question, which will feature it and thus attract more attention. But only do this after you’ve ensured your question is clear and properly tagged.
@Das_Geek Oh, oops. Thanks.
@Das_Geek That link doesn’t show me any messages from Scratte
As an answer to your question @Scratte, you can look at all your previous review by going to your user profile page, navigating to the "Activity" tab, then clicking the "All actions" tab that's underneath all your main stats on that page. You can select the "Reviews" section and get links to all your reviews. Clicking on each one, you can see what others have chosen if that review item has been completed. You can then compare your feedback and see if yours matched
Though I will say be careful about using the popular consensus as the "ultimate litmus test" for seeing if you're right. If you have any questions about a particular review action, feel free to ask here or post on Meta