noalias comments to X3J11
Tom Neff
tneff at atpal.UUCP
Tue Mar 29 01:23:15 AEST 1988
In article <1988Mar25.172355.348 at utzoo.uucp> henry at utzoo.uucp (Henry Spencer) writes:
>Interrupt routines are almost by definition esoteric, not to mention highly
>machine-specific. Only on PCs do users commonly write their own interrupt
>routines...
It would be fairer to say "only on microcomputers" rather than "only on
PCs." I write real-time systems for a living, and so do a lot of other
folks I know. We do write interrupt routines, and plenty of 'em. "C" is
a strong contender among languages for this work, because of its portability
and lack of overhead. The basic concept of /volatile/ is very important to
me, and I'm glad XJ311 recognizes it. Many's the time I have had to surround
a few statements with forests of labels or calls to dummy() just to get one
compiler or another to stop optimizing access to a location!
I will admit, though, that /vol/ is a grown-up keyword, which plenty of
programmers will have little use for. But it needn't intrude in your lives
at all. Those who need it, use it. (Fortunately it's not too much of a pain
to implement -- effectively it just flags optimization off for certain
variables). It does sound like /noalias/ is making a much noisier and messier
splash on its arrival in the standard. I am not too keen on forcing a strange
new keyword into half the declarations, for instance, in dear old stdio.h. TMN
--
Tom Neff
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