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01:19
well i think it stands for "not a number"
 
2 hours later…
03:33
@casih yes, I know what is it. I'm just not sure, how is it relevant to C. Because... can't remember NAN being defined in any of standards. And this kind a supports my claim.
 
4 hours later…
user3079266
07:24
@Kamiccolo floating point numbers can have NaN values. IIRC, printf can even output them...
09:02
Guys
can anyone identify what this is.. but no googling.. lets play fair..
2jmj7l5rSw0yVb/vlWAYkK/YBwk=
Its a bit too specific.. it wil be easy for people who have worked with cryptographic hash functions..
@haris "Hello World"
 
3 hours later…
user3079266
12:40
@haris looks like a base64 of some binary data, no?
user3079266
if it's actually some hashed stuff, I'd have to convert it to binary and from there to hex to identify the function...
user3079266
and I'm too lazy to do so =)
user3079266
helloc @holgac;
Hi :)
That's my first time using SO chat, I feel like i was missing out :)
user3079266
@holgac hah, I know that feel ;) I also didn't get to the chat right when my rep got large enough to allow it
12:50
haha :) we were discussing in a post's comment section and going off topic, so a moderator pointed us to chat. If I wasn't involved, I'd still be missing out :)
@Mints97 heh, someone should remember seeing this on some RFC :}
user3079266
@Kamiccolo which ones?
welcome, @holgac :} Nice to see You here!
Thank you @Kamiccolo :) I see C programmers have manners, since most of us started programming by saying hello :)
> The sha1 value (in base64) for an empty body (canonicalized to a null input) is "2jmj7l5rSw0yVb/vlWAYkK/YBwk=".

I suppose it was about RFC4871
user3079266
12:59
@Kamiccolo ah, I see =) so it's da39a3ee5e6b4b0d3255bfef95601890afd80709. Who'd have guessed.
user3079266
who uses base64 instead of hex on hashes anyway?
@holgac Not sure about all the C programmers and some of other SO chats.. but... in here we believe it's important to keep it at least respectful and welcoming to new users... :}
@Mints97 isn't it a common pattern on WEB and some other network related things? :}
user3079266
@Kamiccolo never encountered it
@Mints97 I've been seeing this for some time... back then WAP was grand... :}
 
1 hour later…
14:25
ufff.... and where to use all those WML and WTAI things which still staying in my head? : ]
 
4 hours later…
18:19
Hi all. New c programmer here. Hoping to to absorb some info [ :
Hi @dreilly83, welcome :)
@holgac thanks!
user3079266
helloc @dreilly83;
Hi @Mints97 . Nice to see friendly people on the internet
haha that was my reaction 5 hours ago
18:31
@holgac I just read the discussion regarding the pointer-one-past the last element
@DrorK. what do you think?
I'm the only one who thinks that the standard is rather clear, when it doesn't make an exception for using a null pointer?
If there was an exception for a null pointer, then the debate about whether a pointer to one past the last element could've make sense
But if a null pointer is not allowed, then what's the point?
I think the standard means that it's perfectly valid for memmove or memcpy to dereference the provided pointers. so passing one-past last element seems wrong to me
Don't forget that dereferencing is not the only guarantee a valid pointer has within this context
It also has the guarantee that you can +1 the pointer, and reach to the one-past-the-last-element
So if such a function, for what ever reason, relies on that- that's UB even without dereferencing
It seems like C programmers want liberties and guarantees, while the C committee's attention is on the side of the implementors
yeah, I can't believe I missed that part
18:42
I say, if you want liberties and guarantees- write implementation-specific code
OP says that such a pointer (one past the end) points to into the address space of the program, a criterion required for a pointer to be valid according to §7.1.4., i didn't actually know that
The concern is not with the one-past-the-end, the concern is with two-past-the-end
If I have a structure of one KB and request a page from OS (assume page is 4KB), and store 4 of my instances there, 4th element + 1 wouldn't necessarily point to address space, would it?
Well, this is more of an implementation-detail where the commitee said some words about
When it came to C89, the standard wasn't explicit about the idea that the one-past-the-last, and the first element of an adjacent object, to be the same
(although C89's rationale did mention it has a justification for allowing one-past-the-end, without allowing the case for one-before-the-first, which wouldn't be easy to allow the address '0')
C99 was explicit, and it said that the one-pas-the-end, and an adjacent object's first-element, are the same pointer
There was a paper going into details of theoretical implementations, they gave suggestions of how assumptions could easily break, at least the ones taken by the committee. But rather they would be considered conforming? That's a different story
Let me look for the paper
@dreilly83 Here's some advice from a fellow beginner: RUN!
@DrorK. thanks!
18:57
@dreilly83 How it's going, how are you learning C?
@DrorK. this seems like a nice resource, I'll take a look at it, thank you.
I'm currently studying for a course, sorry for not fully focusing on the subject
@DrorK. its going alright. I'm reading through a book called C primer plus. And just trying to work on well known "problems". Currently implementing Conway's game of life.
You're implementing a game?!
How experienced are you?
19:00
In C not very experienced, but I've been developing web applications professionally for about 5 years.
in which languages?
I've worked in Ruby, PHP, C#, and (don't hate me) Coldfusion.
I think it's the first time I've stumbled a C beginner that is implementing a game
well its not technically a game
game of life is a simple simulation ruleset for a boolean table
19:01
Most beginners are too busy trying to understand where's the String type
there is 0 user interaction
I started C++ with an attempt to develop a game, by the way. I only knew a little actionscript 1.0 then
user3079266
@dreilly83 whoa, people still use Coldfusion? O_o I thought it was a dead technology...
haha, you'd be very surprised @Mints97
not sayign i enjoy the work, but there is an abundance of it, especially in government contracting
Morning @Mints97
19:03
our government loves asp and other dotnet stuff
user3079266
@holgac AS 1.0? That hunk of ancient junk that looks like messy mnemonics for bytecode at best? :DDD Must've been hard transferring to C++ from it
user3079266
helloc @DrorK.;
user3079266
@holgac ha, yeah, that's a pattern I see with many government websites...
@Mints97 well, yeah. And I was trying to learn OpenGL when I didn't know what struct is.
user3079266
@holgac the fun part would be what'd happen if you succeeded! XD
19:05
it's even more fun when you're twelve and don't know english much. real fun.
@holgac where are you from?
but that eventually led me to find a part-time job in a game company, so it wasn't such a bad idea after all :)
@dreilly83 turkey
user3079266
@holgac but wait, how did you end up knowing AS 1.0 without knowing Lingo? I thought that back in the day this horror was used, Flash was still mostly used as a Shockwave XTra?
@Mints97 well there was a magazine about PCs and they gave out cracked Macromedia Flash and published a few articles about actionscript. I don't remember the articles mentioning lingo
user3079266
ah well, maybe it could have been between Flash separating itself from Shockwave and the just-as-crappy AS 2.0 being released...
19:12
well actually I checked the dates, I started using flash in 2002, so it might have been AS 2.0 instead. I vaguely remember it was flash 5
that magazine about PCs were horrible though. Once they gave out mandrake linux and I installed it. I thought it was a software. Turned out format erases your existing data.
I've found another comment of Lundin: "Eh? Since the standard declaration of free() is void free(void *ptr); the compiler can't do anything with the pointer itself, just the contents. The compiler cannot set it to NULL or "destroy it" (how do you destroy a pointer?), or do anything else in a fancy, implementation-defined way, since the free function only has access a local copy of the pointer."
He has a reputation of 27K... most of it in C?
user3079266
@DrorK. I don't see anything wrong with the comment?
@Mints97 An implementation is allowed to do anything with the pointers, thinking of them as "static" objects, is wrong
user3079266
@DrorK. what, at any point in the program, under any condition?
What he/she probably means is that the value of ptr is not changed after a free
19:27
@Mints97 The case here is about the value of the pointer after free()
@holgac Which is wrong
user3079266
@DrorK. the local value of the pointer can't change because a pointer to it is not being passed to the function. Or does the standard make a special case for pointers here?
Unless free is a macro, how can it change the values? and c99 defines free as a function
@Mints97 Once you do: free(ptr); , the value of 'ptr' is indeterminate, it can do and be anything and everything
user3079266
@DrorK. that is, IMHO, entirely point-less =P
Actually it's of great significance, to understand the boundaries of how you should 'behave' within this sandbox of assumptions vs guarantees
19:32
c99 doesn't state whether free can or cannot change the value of ptr. do you mean compiler is free to set a new value to ptr after free call? because the function signature implies that it cannot
@holgac The signature of fprintf() suggests that it takes variable-arguments, does it mean that it uses va_arg()?
C99 6.2.4p2 [...] "The value of a pointer becomes indeterminate when the object it points to reaches the end of its lifetime"
@DrorK. but what you're now saying is implementation detail. fprintf is free to obtain the arguments from the stack or use va_arg
@holgac Which means that the appearance of this or that function is meaningless
yeah I see your point, though that detail in the standard still seems meaningless
That's the difference between interpreting a program with the eyes of a programmer, or the eyes of an implementor
If you think like a programmer, then you think that only the set of rules that you're confined to, apply.
If you think like an implementor, then you have a chance of understanding how it's possible that the value is now "changed", and why breaking the effective types rules result with this or that unexpected behavior
unsigned char c;

printf("%p\n", (void *) &c);

if (c)
    puts("1");

if (!c)
    puts("0");
Anybody wishes to guess what is expected from this program?
user3079266
19:47
@DrorK. no. Just... no XD
@Mints97 :)
it might even upgrade the OS :D
Are you suggesting this program invokes undefined behavior?
Let's consider >= C99
well i'm not sure actually, c's value is indeterminate but I'm not sure about UB
@holgac What would you assume the valid behavior it may produce?
user3079266
19:49
@DrorK. oh, wait, my eyes were playing tricks on me, that's not dereferencing... that shouldn't actually involve UB, right? It's just that you can't determine what will be printed... or am I wrong?
@Mints97 Answer after holgac, what is the valid behavior it may produce?
in most implementations, the result will be printing 1 or 0 after the address, with 1 having greater chance
@Mints97 What's your answer?
ah, it's freshman year all over again :P
user3079266
@DrorK. I'll pass =) I take the "want to know result" option =P
19:51
Heh
Okay, so if we're dealing with C89
This program is obviously UB
If we're dealing with C99, (even without the printf("%p",... ))
Then this program is well-defined, but the valid behavior it has:
Printing "%p"
Printing "%p", "1"
Printing "%p", "0"
Printing "%p", "1", "0"
Same goes to C11.
If we remove the printf("%p"); with C11, that's UB
user3079266
will it print the actual specifier, or the address? XD
The address, the focus here is about the if's for "1" and "0"
People think that only UB may produce unpredictable results
user3079266
@DrorK. because it says that you should do at least some operation with the uninitialized crap before querying its value?
@Mints97 Because it says that only the stored value is persistent. A value which wasn't explicitly or implicitly stored- is not persistent
so without printf, c might not even exist in stack?
19:56
@holgac Without the printf(), it's still well-defined under C99, but UB under C11
This example is of a great significance, because it's actually well-defined under C99 and C11, and it produced unexpected results
People tend to think that only UB could cause unexpected results
user3079266
@DrorK. I don't get the significance of printf... Care to explain? =)
I find this quote more hilarious every second: "C is like ancient religions. lots of rules and no mercy"
2
@holgac Good one :)
user3079266
@holgac and just like with all ancient religions, only a small bunch of people actually know the rules well =)
@Mints97 Sure, at C99- the committee didn't allow an unsigned char object, to have a value which is outside its representation.
19:59
Let's hope it won't be a mythology in the future :)
user3079266
@holgac BTW, C++ has even more rules, and maybe even less mercy for your brain...
C11 came, and said that's crazy. Why should 8-bit unsigned char, be allowed to represent 256 values? It's obviously should be allowed to represent 257 values
user3079266
@DrorK. wait, what?
user3079266
what's the 257'th?
new C++ specs are making the code even harder to read
257 is probably the superposition :D
20:01
@Mints97 If you happen to support a register with 256 values and a "Not a value" state, that's 257 :)
schrodinger's unsigned char
user3079266
@DrorK. how the heck is that even possible? That would have to take an extra bit, squandered just to represent an extra state! Who would ever implement something like that? ><
@Mints97 it's probably in compiler-level, not actual representation
"That would have been my reaction too, if I was paid by the word."
user3079266
20:03
Or are we possibly talking something besides bits here? Like trits? Was C11 designed to be able to run on good old Setun? :D Or maybe something more esoteric like Knuth's MIX?
@Mints97 "In 2007, Rich Peterson, working at HP, was disappointed to find that the “Not a Thing” (NaT) value that registers can have on the Itanium architecture could not be used to implement an uninitialized unsigned char."
non-deterministic machines, yay! now we can solve NP-complete problems
user3079266
@DrorK. "On the ia64, each 64-bit register is actually 65 bits..." facepalm
user3079266
so much work for something that useless. 'cmon, it ain't the goddam FPU, we don't get NaNs here!
they fail at unaligned memory access as well, god I hate ia64
I'm lucky I never had to work with ia64 or SPARC
20:08
When it comes to C and strict-conformance
It's mission impossible.
If people try to bend the rules and make up their own interpretations/beliefs... just write implementation-specific code and end it
It's a lost cause
user3079266
@DrorK. and you haven't tried C++ yet... =P
I had a silly argument about somebody who pretended to know C++
It was infantile
user3079266
the thing has many times as much features as C (especially the last standard revisions), and they are al standartized in pretty much as much detail as the C standard
user3079266
@DrorK. it is impossible to know C++ completely =)
From the little I've seen of C++, especially with things related to C
C++ seemed to be more straight-forward, more explicit
user3079266
20:14
@DrorK. and much, much, much more richer in features
Maybe not as explicit and defined as we all would like our specification to be
But silly things that I've stumbled at C were better at C++
For example, the thing with an explicit initializer of: {}
Or better dealing with the const compatibility, where C miserably failed with
What else
Empty function declarator are explicitly "void"
Mandating that a signed char won't have padding bits, before C committee has decided to
user3079266
@DrorK. btw, funny thing about void. In C#, void is actually a real type, an alias for the struct System.Void. Just a little piece of unrelated trivia =)
And you still use there pointers to void?
The only thing that "doesn't make sense" with C++ is the fact it lacks the implicit conversions from/to void *
But as I understand malloc() is not even being used there, so it's irrelevant
user3079266
@DrorK. pointers to void, as any other pointers, work only in unsafe code in C#. And it means, just like in C and C++, a pointer to unknown type, and is highly discouraged.
Do you have opaque types?
I recall you've told me about the specification explicitly describes "unsafe" sections
20:22
@dreilly83 interesting fact... sometimes GoL (Game of Life) is being used as an argument against god as intelligent creator. And debate topics more or less relevant to origins of life....
In C, "unsafe" would've been the title as a replacement to "Contents"
Morning @Kamiccolo
@Kamiccolo interesting
@DrorK. almost midnight xP Just had a poker night in the office with colleagues...
I hope you've left with your shirt on
@DrorK. brought two of those this time xD
20:25
Heh
20:38
@dreilly83 also there are some other interesting cellular automatons, for example for modelling electronics... :} based on couple of simple rules and electrons.
@Mints97 it wouldn't surprise me if c# had a reference counted void pointer actually pointing to void
> On November 23, 2013, Dave Greene built the first replicator in Conway's Game of Life that creates a complete copy of itself, including the instruction tape
^_^
user3079266
@holgac void cannot be pointed to as it cannot be instantiated. It is one of C#'s "false types" which can be used in reflection and generally make the type system look a bit less "hack-and-slash" (not to say they're doing a good job...)
to think that they did a good job by forbidding instantiating void clearly defines my thoughts of dotnet family
user3079266
@holgac oh, C# is actually a really good language, once you get used to the excessive comfort devices =)
user3079266
20:43
dunno about other .NET langs, though...
@Mints97 my experience with C# starts and ends with implementing mono in a project. there was no chance for me to like it, mono documentation was terrible
@Mints97 How about opaque types?
(brb)
user3079266
@DrorK. sure, there's boxing (although you can still guess the boxed variable's type). In unsafe code, you also get void*. But actually encapsalution reduces the need for opaque types
user3079266
one thing I sometimes miss in C# is macros...
I thought OOP language users usually hated macros
user3079266
20:51
@holgac that is mostly true. C++ -ers have their (turing-complete) templates and seldom have a need for C macros. The other OOP programmers have never encountered them and generally hate them for being too crude/non-type-safe/etc,etc,etc
Yeah, some macros in linux kernel enforce type safety by doing really weird looking compile-time tricks
user3079266
@holgac compile-time tricks? What, does the Linux kernel have anything besides them? XD
yeah, there are also runtime tricks :D
I'm messing with kernel code for like 7-8 months and those tricks started to feel normal, i'm not sure if that's a good thing
@holgac xD
but don't you people also feel the weird satisfaction of doing a simple task so complicated?
user3079266
20:59
@holgac what do you mean?
@Mints97 after learning about stack and how arguments are passed by default, I wrote a function that changed the auto-variables of the caller, for example
I mean, why, right? That's the worst thing possible. but the satisfaction was being able to do so
user3079266
@holgac you were lucky none of them got stuffed into a register... =)
user3079266
@holgac I actually think that's a great thing to try to do.
user3079266
sure, it is non-stadard, but helps figure out things like the program's memory layout...
user3079266
I used to answer questions on stuff like that on SO
21:03
@Mints97 exactly! but the satisfaction wasn't about that either, i don't know, i can't explain I guess
but you should have seen me when I discovered I could #define private public in c++, before including headers :D
user3079266
@holgac I know that =) you feel you have more power over the machine than ever before... feel like a kid's image of a hacker... =P
exactly! :)
user3079266
@holgac that's not as cruel as #define true 0 #define false 1 in C =)
or #define true rand()%50
user3079266
@holgac I see you've read the "word preprocessor usage" thead XD
21:06
haha, or #define struct union :D
yeah :D

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