On Thu, Jul 19, 2018 at 10:40 PM Jeff King <p...@peff.net> wrote:
>
> There are a few standard C functions (like strcpy) which are
> easy to misuse. We generally discourage these in reviews,
> but we haven't put advice in CodingGuidelines, nor provided
> any automated enforcement. The latter is especially
> important because it's more consistent, and it can often
> save a round-trip of review.
>
> Let's start by banning strcpy() and sprintf(). It's not
> impossible to use these correctly, but it's easy to do so
> incorrectly, and there's always a better option.

Is it possible to extend this to ban variables as well? I'm still
going to delete the_index from library code. Once that work is done I
will ban it from entering again (it's only allowed in builtin/ for
example). The next target after that would be the_repository.

Right now I will do this by not declaring the variable [2], which ends
up with a much less friendly compile warning. I did something similar
[1] in an earlier iteration but did not do extensive research on this
topic like you did.

[1] https://public-inbox.org/git/20180606073933.14755-1-pclo...@gmail.com/T/
[2] https://public-inbox.org/git/20180616054157.32433-16-pclo...@gmail.com/
-- 
Duy

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