On Mon, Nov 18, 2024 at 07:39:09PM -0600, G. Branden Robinson wrote: > At 2024-11-19T01:47:33+0100, onf wrote: > > On Tue Nov 19, 2024 at 12:37 AM CET, G. Branden Robinson wrote: > > > At 2024-11-18T21:43:24+0100, onf wrote: > > > > [...] > > > > Just a small nitpick, but you should probably do s/(warning) /\1/. > > > > > > Yes, that was a code style goof. Thanks! Fixed. > > > > Hopefully the way I suggested... > > Yes. Clark's coding style is not the one from the GNU Coding Standards, > with the weird brace indentation. > > Personally, I have a strong distaste for jamming parentheses up against > control structure keywords, like `if(` or `switch(`, though I know some > disciples of old-school Bell Labs code will cling to it unto death.
Just weighing in with my style because I'm waiting for my dinner to cook... I like void * malloc(size_t size) { } because I can grep for "^malloc(" and find the function definition rather than calls to it. I'm a former Linux kernel guy, briefly, and I don't care for their style. I do #define unless(x) if (!(x)) if (something) something_else; if (somemorethings) { one; two; or_more; } else if (whatever) { whatever; } else { else; } I tend to write functions sort of like so: int somefunc(args...) { char* a = 0; int* b = 0; type* c = 0; unless (a = malloc(something)) goto err; ... unless (b = malloc(something * sizeof(int) goto err; ... unless (c = malloc(something * sizeof(type) goto err; // bunch of code that does stuff with a, b, c return (success); err: if (a) free(a); if (b) free(b); if (c) free(c); return (error); } Dinner is ready, I'm out.