Yet Another Lint Foul-up
Jim Shankland
jas at ernie.Berkeley.EDU
Sat Jan 7 03:52:52 AEST 1989
In article <1298 at tank.uchicago.edu> vevea at paideia.UUCP (Jack L. Vevea) asks
(paraphrased), why people make a fuss about lint messages that they
know to be inconsequential -- is it that a higher authority requires
that their code be lint-free, or are they just being obsessive "slaves
to lint?"
Sometimes, a higher authority does require lint-free code. This is not
a bad thing, even if you do have to do some pretty strange things
(e.g., using "#ifdef lint") to make it happen. Even when there is no
such higher authority, it's a good idea to arrange for code to be
completely lint-free. While I *know* that "possible pointer alignment
problem" on return from malloc() is inconsequential, other, even
more highly paid software engineers :-) "know" that all kinds of other
lint messages are inconsequential, because the code works fine on their
VAX. This is a sad fact; very sad, but very much a fact.
Second, if my code generates n inconsequential lint messages, then every
time I re-lint the code, I have to pick out the "real" lint, if any,
from the n inconsequential messages. This is burdensome and error-prone.
Better to habitually use a few contrivances that eliminate the harmless
lint messages.
(Of course, the above-mentioned software engineers may then put all sorts
of unsafe weirdness into their code "to shut lint up". Ultimately,
this is a major problem with C: it's too easy to write non-portable code,
and too hard to specify the rules for writing portable code. No, I'm
not proposing a solution, and I'm certainly not saying we should all
be programming in Pascal -- just pointing out a *very* costly problem
with the language. If you doubt me, consider this small example:
what percentage of C programmers do you think know what the correct
definition of NULL is, and when NULL needs to be preceded by a type cast,
despite regular clarifications of the question in comp.lang.c? No
fair counting those who "know" an answer that is wrong!)
Jim Shankland
jas at ernie.berkeley.edu
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