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Albert Holguin wrote:
That's pretty darn ironic... an error in the
showerr() function...
yeah, ironic...believe me, if you've ever had to diagnose one, you feel, hmmm, pressed
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So, "software", with over 20 year old code,
AND STILL IN USE?!
lol
*points and laughs loudly*
I wonder who will be scratching his head trying to understand my codes in 20 years... He's probably not even born yet. Ahhh, he will have a good laugh too, reading my comments in the code, and then posting snipplets here... lol
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Last I heard, code I started maintaining in 1988 was still being used in a COM object behind a benefits enrollment system (it was ported from another program to deal with Federal Income Tax). Software archaeology is not an oxymoron.
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Jochen Arndt wrote: controls a temperature bath
After reading this and then showerr I wondered why the function wasn't named bath , and noted there is a typo in the function name (the double 'r' at the end).
Then I realized the posting was about something entirely different...
Jochen Arndt wrote: they always wonder why the software often locks
Woot, they wondered for decades and never demanded a fix? Can I have your users please??
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Stefan_Lang wrote: Woot, they wondered for decades and never demanded a fix? Can I have your users please?
It is a controlling app that does not require user interaction after optional initial settings upon starting it. Reported errors are serious and the app is waiting for any key press and terminates. So they decided that it does not matter.
The users are not as pleasant as you think. They complain about many things. But with most questions they ask me, I ask them: Did you tried F1?
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Stefan_Lang wrote: Woot, they wondered for decades and never demanded a fix? Can I have your users
please??
Can't fix it unless you can find it, and an uninitialized pointer can often be found to be pointing at something that looks like valid memory (say, some other string's buffer that isn't getting used at the moment) so the error doesn't occur all the time. Errors like this become "cold cases" because there are so few clues to follow. I sort of doubt that the users were quiet about it, either.
Pertinent to but opposing a point made by someone's tag line I read today, this is why I always initialize as close to the definition as possible, just to keep in the habit - I work in environments that assume initialization as well as environments like C where assumptions make asses out of everyone.
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Yes, uninitialized pointers can be nasty, especially since they normally will be 0 when you look at the problem in debug builds and thus fail to reproduce the issue. But that alone (i. e. a bug that happens only in release) is enough of on an indication for me to look at initialization first.
Fortunately modern runtimes will no longer accept pointers that do not point into at least the data segment, or aren't aligned properly, so you're normally able to find the culprit very fast.
I, too, intialize every variable, to the point of assigning at least 0 (or nullptr , now), even when the actual initialization happens only two lines below. The point being, that 'two lines below' will likely not remain 'only two lines' in the long run.
I also sometimes use an intialization function for a class, so I can call it in each constructor. While it's more efficient to use initializers in each constructor, it's way too easy to forget one when introducing additional members later. I wonder why initializers for member variables are not allowed...
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Blame can be put on the compiler that didn't raise an "uninitialized variable" warning, or triple blame on the programmer if he ignored it.
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The originally used compiler was MSC 6. May be the latest versions has been build using VC 1.52. I don't remember if these C compilers generate such warnings. A look into the make file shows that warning level /W3 has been used.
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MSC6 is Microsoft C Compiler version 6 (no 'V') released 1990! VC 1.52c has been released 1995 and is the last version with full MS-DOS support.
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Yep. I started using Visual C++ with VC 1.51. You find traces of it on web pages. MSC6 is much more forgotten... (no confusion)
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I still have an VC 1.52 installation in XP Mode and checked the help:
Warnings C4700 and C4701 are present but require /Oe (global register allocation) which is not set in the make file.
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YvesDaoust wrote: IMHO such a condition (potentially uninitialized variable) should be signalled by default by any compiler because this can rescue you from painful bugs.
C4700 is a level 1 warning and therefore shown by default (the /Oe limitation does not exist anymore for actual compilers).
With debug versions, I always use level 4. Code is not allowed to be released, if there are any warnings. In some special cases, I use the method from your 2nd link to disable warnings including a comment.
Thank you for the 1st link. I did not know about until now.
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Strange that the warning levels did depend on the optimization levels. In theory, optimization is fully transparent to the program semantics, isn't it ?
"Code is not allowed to be released, if there are any warnings": it is tempting for some developers to bypass this by just disabling the warnings. As heavy as this may be, such twists should be appropriately commented.
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YvesDaoust wrote: Strange that the warning levels did depend on the optimization levels. In theory, optimization is fully transparent to the program semantics, isn't it ?
Of course. But the used compilers are historic.
YvesDaoust wrote: "Code is not allowed to be released, if there are any warnings": it is tempting for some developers to bypass this by just disabling the warnings. As heavy as this may be, such twists should be appropriately commented.
They must be commented. But there are situations where warnings may be disabled. An example would be using DAO which floods the output with C4995 warnings (name was marked as #pragma deprecated).
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Today I found this code, from DAL class
public Boolean Execute_NoN_Query(string Sqlstring)
{
int ResultFlag = 0;
ResultFlag = MSSqlHelper.SqlHelper.ExecuteNonQuery(SqlServerConnection.Cn, CommandType.Text, Sqlstring);
if (ResultFlag != 0)
return true;
else
return false;
}
My Code is ....
public Boolean Execute_NoN_Query(string Sqlstring)
{
return (0 != MSSqlHelper.SqlHelper.ExecuteNonQuery(SqlServerConnection.Cn, CommandType.Text, Sqlstring));
}
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That
if(something)
return true;
else return false;
... is far too prevalent. Its cousin,
if(something)
return a;
else return b;
... is at least understandable as some people have an allergic reaction to even simple ternaries (I have no idea why, they are a perfectly valid part of the language and have been since C).
Interesting to see someone else who likes to do
if(0 != ...)
... as well.
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Ternaries ... you're right, as long as the expressions in the ternaries are simple, they are readable. But they can be simple initially, and become monstrous as the code evolves. Which may be why many people avoid ternaries - the same as with braces around blocks consisting of a single statement.
Although I don't buy either (no ternaries and braces around single statements) - you write the code as is fit initially, and reformat/refactor as needed when you change it.
There's another horror format:
boolean b;
...
if (b == true)
return x;
else
return y;
A variant is b being a boolean function.
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Florin Jurcovici wrote: Although I don't buy either (no ternaries and braces around single statements) - you write the code as is fit initially, and reformat/refactor as needed when you change it.
Yes, exactly. And a simple
return statement ? a : b
... is not too hard to read, for sure.
Someone here is really passive-aggressive anti-ternary, judging by the downvote my other post got
Heh, that pattern is even worse.
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Probably gets paid by lines of code.
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BobJanova wrote: Someone here is really passive-aggressive anti-ternary, judging by the downvote
my other post got
Some people hate concision. Many of them, IMO, will need to look that word up :P
Truly, I've seen some real abuse of ternaries, which becomes a real horror if you have to add "elseif" cases. This is why some organizations ban them completely.
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BobJanova wrote: Interesting to see someone else who likes to do
if(0 != ...)
... as well.
This is called Yoda condition.
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