Jan 5, 2023 01:29
The statement num1 %= 1000; in function fast_write_3_ints() seems redundant.
 
Sep 27, 2022 06:09
Please do not post links to executable files. Question edited.
 
Sep 27, 2022 06:09
@0___________: I think this question is a good opportunity for beginners to learn some effective techniques. If this question is reopened, I shall post a didactic answer with 3 simple improvements to produce the correct result in a mere 10 seconds on my old laptop.
 
Jun 19, 2022 21:15
I understand the feeling... I battled many times with undocumented file formats most of which have gone extinct since. Good luck with your efforts!
Jun 19, 2022 20:51
You could also invent a readable text version for the FLP file contents. You would need a converters from/to FLP but this would allow for manual editing in VSC or your favorite editor...
Jun 19, 2022 20:48
Coding in Windows is a headache too, but I left this platform 15 years ago :)
Jun 19, 2022 20:48
I hate C++ too. It shows sometimes in my contributions :)
Jun 19, 2022 20:47
Interesting, the javascript parser node-flp parses the file into an object hierarchy but I did not see an unparser to write an updated flp file. This is your goal?
Jun 19, 2022 20:41
IMHO, C will force you to write a simpler parser than C++
Jun 19, 2022 20:40
The C# parser might be a better start... I could not find a proper spec for this file format
Jun 19, 2022 20:35
@demberto: What does the file format look like?
Jun 19, 2022 20:35
@demberto: no, it is probably not difficult, albeit you do not give any hint about the file format. Cross platform code must work with both classes of endianness, honor alignment constraints, handle varying integer type sizes... Using stream functions would probably be a bad idea anyway.
Jun 19, 2022 20:35
@demberto: yes you can! you seem experienced enough to write an appropriate platform independent parser...
Jun 19, 2022 20:35
@demberto: For your parsing problem, you should probably define a structure with a pointer to the memory block holding the file data and some parsing context and define functions that will update this structure while producing parsed items as you go. Avoid naming your function read as this name is used for a standard system call on POSIX systems.
Jun 19, 2022 20:35
@demberto: you say I myself work on Windows and I want cross platform support that's why I am sticking to the standard library The problem with this platform is its plethoric API riddled with quirks rooted in legacy choices. It is difficult to write cross platform code with MSVC on Windows, this compiler keeps insisting on using the so called secure functions, which are implemented with APIs that are not compatible with the ones included in the C Standard.
 
Jun 8, 2022 06:38
I don't think it was the intent of the committee. As a matter of fact, more recent versions of 5.1.2.2.3 use unspecified: C23 5.1.2.2.3 Program termination If the return type of the main function is a type compatible with int, a return from the initial call to the main function is equivalent to calling the exit function with the value returned by the main function as its argument; reaching the } that terminates the main function returns a value of 0. If the return type is not compatible with int, the termination status returned to the host environment is unspecified.
Jun 8, 2022 06:38
@Lundin: C90 6.6.6.4 specifies and the value of the function call is used by the caller. But the initial caller of main not necessarily C code, hence not covered by this statement. C90 has 5.1.2.2.3 to cover the initial call to main() that does not use the term undefined behavior, just the termination status returned to the host environment is undefined. It might be more consistent to have write indeterminate in this particular case.
Jun 8, 2022 06:38
Hence the exit status is undefined but the behavior of the program is defined, and the code is conforming.
Jun 8, 2022 06:38
In C90, the code invoked undefined behavior because of the missing return statement. I disagree: the behavior is undefined If a return statement without an expression is executed and the value of the function call is used by the caller, but this does not cover the startup code, and C90 has The return from the initial call to the main function is equivalent to calling the exit function with the value returned by the main function as its argument. If the main function executes a return that specifies no value, the termination status returned to the host environment is undefined.
 
Mar 7, 2022 23:28
I wonder what is the goal of CS classes for using such obsolete systems. Are you targeting s space probe that needs an update? Read and rave about Firmware update over the vacuum and The brains of the Voyager Spacecraft
Mar 7, 2022 23:28
Borland C aka TurboC! Thank you for reminding me of fun times in real mode. I actually used Wizard C before Philippe Kahn licenced it to make TurboC. Unless you are interested in archaeology, playing with these toys will get you nowhere. Set up a minimal 32-bit linux system on a pocket sized single chip board and learn useful modern stuff.
Mar 7, 2022 23:28
@Joshua: Using threads with obsolete compilers/libraries targeting DOS-Win32 is a recipe for disaster. What compiler is this?
Mar 7, 2022 23:28
@Joshua: this compiler is broken beyond repair: documenting such major bugs is no compensation for the time wasted by programmers. What is your target system?
Mar 7, 2022 23:28
@Joshua: what you are describing is disturbing... post the code for the comparison function, it is possible that the receiving function was not expecting a misaligned pointer means it has an incorrect prototype or invalid implementation.
 
Nov 29, 2021 14:06
@becec23434: of course, but ctx is a local object, so no side effect on external objects, hence a smart compiler can potentially detect that if md5_update is an inline function. Can you post the #include lines?
 
May 24, 2021 15:32
@AndreasWenzel: indeed I missed the nullptr idiom and the 2 argument strcpy_s usage. Everything else in the OP's code is genuine C code. I assume the OP is learning C and using a Microsoft C++ compiler to compile C code, which alas creates confusion.
May 24, 2021 15:32
@AndreasWenzel: this is another typical case of Microsoft's poisonous Embrace, Extend and Extinguish policy
 
Jan 25, 2021 22:47
A good illustration of Kernighan's Law of debugging: Debugging is twice as hard as writing the code in the first place. Therefore, if you write the code as cleverly as possible, you are, by definition, not smart enough to debug it.
Jan 25, 2021 22:47
is this considered bad practice to cram things into a single statement so braces can be skipped? ABSOLUTELY!
Jan 25, 2021 22:47
num_chars should be the total number of bytes read.
Jan 25, 2021 22:47
@JohnKugelman: I'm afraid in_word is only decremented if it is true. This behavior is well defined. There are other problems beyond the code being unnecessarily convoluted and absconse.
Jan 25, 2021 22:47
in_word ? num_words++, num_lines ++, in_word-- : num_lines++; -> { num_words += in_word; in_word = 0; num_lines++; }
Jan 25, 2021 22:47
in_word ? num_words++, num_lines ++, in_word-- : num_lines++; What are you trying to achieve? Code obfuscation? Use a block and a test for the next reader of your code, which may well be yourself a few days or years from now. Btw the code has undefined behavior because bool in_word; is uninitialized.
Jan 25, 2021 22:47
if (in_word) num_words ++; -> num_words += in_word;
 
Sep 7, 2020 11:22
if rename still unsuccessful, throw an error, remove tmp file and give up you have already removed the original file, so removing the temporary file causes complete data loss! NOT ACCEPTABLE. You should instead try and re-create the fadd file and copy the contents of the temp file back to it. Only then can you remove the temporary file. If you cannot re-create the fadd file, do not remove the temporary file.
 
Sep 3, 2020 02:20
@PeterCordes: I would not be surprised, but careful benchmarking will tell.
Sep 3, 2020 02:20
Hello, did you perform benchmarks on very long strings? I get a 12x speedup with a C version using 64-bit reads, without any SIMD code...
 
Sep 2, 2020 13:43
Hello, did you perform benchmarks on very long strings? I get a 12x speedup with a C version without any SIMD code...
 
Aug 20, 2020 14:11
The book has already been referenced in stackoverflow.com/questions/562303/… by rep_movsd in 2017 with this precise example.
 
Jul 21, 2020 04:21
@P__J__: I think downvotes should not be anonymous, or maybe only for low rep users
Jul 21, 2020 04:21
What do you mean by concatenating by zero from the right side
Jul 21, 2020 04:21
@LiamLony: that's a very different question.
Jul 21, 2020 04:21
Probably the same that is DV my post too :)
 
Jul 14, 2020 11:37
@marcofasa: actually you allocate all lines a 1024 buffers in Reallocation2D(),but not in Create2D(), but this might not be required nor sufficient to handle the file. Post more code, especially what you do to read the file in memory.
Jul 14, 2020 11:37
@marcofasa: reallocating this way is not sufficient: the size must be sizeof(char*) * dim * 2 and you should add for (size_t i = dim; i < dim * 2; i++) { a[i] = NULL; }
Jul 14, 2020 11:37
Yes, I am aware of these points, but I think performance can be greatly improved in many ways.
Jul 14, 2020 11:37
I am investigating python internals to improve performance, we should have a talk sometime.
Jul 14, 2020 11:37
Back in May, attendance was about 2 or 3%. Now we are approaching 80%. And all the restaurants in the neighbourhood are open.
Jul 14, 2020 11:37
@bruno: life is good! I have been back in the office since May :)
 
May 26, 2020 04:28
@Lucas: we all have something to learn from asking and answering questions, Shawn discovered these archaic getw() and putw() functions, which were already branded Legacy in the 1997 Single Unix Specification. No surprise he did not know of them. The last time I used these, int was still 16-bits in the mainstream OS of the time. I leaned that they survived the 80' and switched to 32-bits, and you learned to avoid them, and some dirty details about text mode in legacy systems and more importantly to stop writing while (!feof()).