Initializing arrays of char
Karl Heuer
karl at haddock.ima.isc.com
Tue Oct 9 08:32:38 AEST 1990
In article <26860 at mimsy.umd.edu> chris at mimsy.umd.edu (Chris Torek) writes:
>[Allowing `char x[5]="12345";' is new to ANSI C.]
True, and therefore the answer to the original question is "failure to accept
this is a compiler bug iff your compiler claims ANSI conformance".
I opposed this feature (prefering to leave it a Common Extension, which was
its pre-ANSI status) because I had a counterproposal (enclosed for your
reading pleasure) that I think was cleaner and more general. Unfortunately, I
didn't have existing practice on my side, and it was rejected.
Karl W. Z. Heuer (karl at kelp.ima.isc.com or ima!kelp!karl), The Walking Lint
--------cut here--------
Proposal #1
Add new escape sequence \c.
Summary
This proposal cleans up two warts in the language: initializing a
character array without adding a null character, and terminating
a hexadecimal escape which might be followed by a valid
hexadecimal digit. It also allows the user to explicitly
document when a null character is unnecessary, e.g.
write(1,"\n\c",1).
Justification
I presume the Committee is already aware of the need for non-
null-terminated character arrays, since the January Draft makes a
special case for them in S3.5.7. However, the mechanism requires
the user to count the characters himself in order to make sure
that he doesn't leave room for the null characters; this is a
maintenance nightmare. My proposal is a cleaner way to
accomplish this.
It has been suggested that although an escape to suppress the
null character is useful, the termination of hex escapes is not
an issue because it is handled by string literal pasting.
String pasting is useful for line continuation without
backslash-newline, and for constructing string literals in
macros, but using it to indicate the end of a hex escape is a
botch. This is nearly as bad as suggesting that the whole string
be written in hex.
Moreover, it's very C-specific; one could not advertise a program
that `accepts all the C escapes' as input, without first solving
the hex-termination problem all over again.
Also, it doesn't handle character constants. The example in
S3.1.3.4 is clearly a kludge--it suggests replacing the hex
escape with octal. This won't always be possible on an
architecture with 12-bit bytes, for example.
Finally, if the \c escape is added anyway for the null-
suppression feature, the additional change of insisting that it
be a no-op in other contexts is minor.
Specific changes
In S3.1.3.4, page 29, line 10, add \c to the list of escapes.
Add the description: `The \c escape at the end of a string
literal suppresses the trailing null character that would
normally be appended. If \c appears in a character constant, or
anywhere in a string literal other than at the end, then it is
ignored, but may serve to separate an octal or hexadecimal escape
from a following digit.'
In S3.1.3.4, page 30, line 35, change '\0223' to '\x12\c3'.
In S3.1.4, page 31, line 29, after `A null character is then
appended' add `unless the string literal ended with \c'. Make a
similar change to line 31. Add the sentence `If a character
string literal or a wide string literal has zero length, the
behavior is undefined'. Add to footnote 16 the text `or it may
lack a trailing null character because of \c'.
In S3.1.4, page 31, line 41, add `This string may also be denoted
by "\x12\c3"'.
In S3.5.7, page 73, line 23, replace `if there is room or if the
array is of unknown size' with `if it has one'. (The ability to
initialize a non-null-terminated array without using \c may be
listed as a Common Extension.)
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