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From: Ben Bacarisse <ben@bsb.me.uk>
Newsgroups: comp.lang.c
Subject: Re: "undefined behavior"?
Date: Fri, 14 Jun 2024 00:55:12 +0100
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Malcolm McLean <malcolm.arthur.mclean@gmail.com> writes:

> On 13/06/2024 19:01, bart wrote:

>> And here it just gets even uglier. You also get situations like this:
>>      uint64_t i=0;
>>      printf("%lld\n", i);
>> This compiles OK with gcc -Wall, on Windows64. But compile under Linux64
>> and it complains the format should be %ld. Change it to %ld, and it
>> complains under Windows.
>> It can't tell you that you should be using one of those ludicrous macros.
>> I've also just noticed that 'i' is unsigned but the format calls for
>> signed. That may or may not be deliberate, but the compiler didn't say
>> anything.
>>
> Exactly. We can't have this just to print out an integer.

This is how C works.  There's no point in moaning about it.  Use another
language or do what you have to in C.

> In Baby X I provide a function called bbx_malloc(). It's is guaranteed
> never to return null. Currently it just calls exit() on allocation failure.
> But it also limits allocation to slightly under INT_MAX. Which should be
> plenty for a Baby program, and if you want more, you always have big boy's
> malloc.

And if you need to change the size?

> But at a stroke, that gets rid of any need for size_t,

But sizeof, strlen (and friends like the mbs... and wcs... functions),
strspn (and friend), strftime, fread, fwrite. etc. etc. all return
size_t.

For people taught to ignore size_t, care is also needed when calling
functions that take size_t arguments as the signed to unsigned
conversion can cause surprises when not flagged by the compiler.  I
don't know if I am right, but I would bet that many of the "don't bother
with size_t" crowd are also in the "don't bother with all those warning
flags to the compiler" crowd.

> and long is very
> special purpose (it holds the 32 bit rgba values).

Isn't that rather wasteful when long is 64 bits?

-- 
Ben.