@Servy: Somehow in every single comment you ignore some part of my suggestion. But I've now decided to not waste my time further with arguing about it.
@Servy: I didn't say they suggest edits. The problem which was noted for high-rep users was that it bumps the question. A minor-edit checkbox could avoid that.
@Servy: And how many of those are from high reputation members? (Ah, I notice now that you speak about "suggested edits". Those who only can suggest edits certainly would not have the necessary reputation to mark changes as minor.)
@Servy: With a separate list, everyone could decide for himself whether he wants to take time checking minor edits (and unlike review, there would be no queue to work up, but just a list). I'd expect actual abuse to be negligible anyway; but the extra list should satisfy also the paranoid. Also the assumption that the time spent on checking minor edits would otherwise have been spent on other activities on the network is just a guess.
One also could provide the minor edit checkbox only to users with enough reputation (basically creating a "minor edit" priviledge). To avoid someone misusing it, one could say that a certain proportion of minor edits still get bumped (say, about 5% of them), and use of that feature is limited to a certain number of minor edits per day. Also, there could be separate lists of minor edits available to moderators (or even to everyone who can flag posts), so that explicit checking for abusive minor edits could be done. without affecting the front page.
This question arises from a discussion originating on this answer.
In a nutshell: The author of the answer (0x499602D2) claimed (correctly, as I now know) that when not skipping whitespace, but the next character is a whitespace, all extracts with the exception of characters will fail.
I questi...
No, the empty string does not have characters. That's why it is called "empty". And there is no space in between the two quotes of the empty string. There's nothing in between. Also, there is no such thing as an empty character. The empty string has zero characters (strlen("") == 0), while any one-character string has, obviously, one character (strlen("a") == 1).
A character is not a string (not even a one-character string). Of course iss >> c should extract the next character, which is 'a'. And iss >> s (where s is a string variable) of course should read until the next delimiter (or eof, or other failure), therefore in this case, it should extract "abc".
Exactly. There's an empty string (i.e, no characters) before the delimiter (space), just as in the C representation of the empty string, there are no characters before the \0 delimiter. Also note that readline also works the same with the \n delimiter: If the \n follows immediately, it doesn't fail but gives an empty string.
I'm not speaking about the representation, I'm speaking about the value. Just as when I'm speaking about the sum of the integers 1234 and 567, I'm not speaking about the byte sequence the specific implementation uses to store those in RAM (the sum should be the same on little-endian and big-endian machines).
Simple logic. An empty string has no characters, and between consecutive characters, there are no characters. Therefore between two characters there's an empty string. Also see the other arguments I've given before. In addition, consider regular expressions which match the empty string: They also match everywhere.
According to your logic the string "abcd" would not contain the string "bc", because the string "bc" contains a \0 after the c which is not found in "abcd". You have to distinguish between the value and representation. The value does not contain the final \0 (that's why strlen("abc") gives 3), while the representation does (that's why sizeof("abc") gives 4). When saying "the string X is included in the string Y", we are speaking about values, not representations.
So at the moment I see only two realistic options: Either to go through the program, looking for out-of-bounds indaxes, uninitialized indexes, uninitialized pointers or the like, or to run the program under valgrind and see if that gives an useful hint on what goes wrong. I'm now pretty sure that somewhere in your code you have one of those.
Ok, if I read the documentation correctly, you get checking (with an immediate abort on error) by just setting the environment variable MALLOC_CHECK_ to 2 before starting the program.
I think there's probably something wrong at a completely different point of the program, which happens to show up here. This could be either some other code allocating excess memory, or some code corrupting the heap.
OK, that that can't it be either. Which IMHO pretty much rules out that the error is in the code you showed. Another thought: Does your compiler have any heap checking functionality (i.e. a function which checks whether the heap is still valid)?
Sorry, what I meant is that where I wrote "array" I meant "vector". s/something/something else/ is a standard command in vi and sed, and is oftzen used informally in Usenet discussions (or was when I was still active in Usenet :-))