On Don, 2007-09-27 at 12:41 +0100, mahamuni ashish wrote:
> I have small code
And the relevance to the Linux kernel as such is?
[]
Add "-Wall -Wextra" and fix all errors and warnings.
> Expected output is
No.
Bernd
--
Firmix Software GmbH http://www.firmix.at
On Thu, Sep 27, 2007 at 05:17:44PM +0200, Jan Engelhardt wrote:
>
>On Sep 27 2007 12:41, mahamuni ashish wrote:
>>I have small code
>
>This is not a kernel problem. (Read your C book and/or ask in
>a C newsgroup.)
Please goto comp.lang.c for help. ;)
--
"Bill, look, we understand that you're
On Sep 27 2007 16:53, linux-os (Dick Johnson) wrote:
>
>If Windows lets you get away with this, then Windows is broken.
>memset(ch,'\0',strlen(ch) );
No, probably just the chance that the memory to which ch points
had a nul in it or in the near bytes.
Use valgrind, move along.
>On Thu, 27 Sep 2
If Windows lets you get away with this, then Windows is broken.
memset(ch,'\0',strlen(ch) );
'ch' is uninitialized local data. Nobody knows what evil lurks...
Thay said, the kernel will make sure that any data that gets
put into your address-space doesn't contain anybody else's
information --t
On Thu, 2007-09-27 at 12:41 +0100, mahamuni ashish wrote:
> I have small code
>
> #include
> #include
>
> int main()
> {
> float f= 1256.35;
> char ch[4];
>
> printf("\n1. f : %f",f);
> memset(ch,'\0',strlen(ch) );
> printf("\n2. f : %f",f);
> return 0;
> }
>
> Expected output is
> 1. f :
On Thu, Sep 27, 2007 at 12:41:41PM +0100, mahamuni ashish wrote:
> I have small code
>
> #include
> #include
>
> int main()
> {
> float f= 1256.35;
> char ch[4];
>
> printf("\n1. f : %f",f);
> memset(ch,'\0',strlen(ch) );
strlen() applied to uninitialized array => undefined behaviour.
Wh
On Thu, 2007-09-27 at 12:41 +0100, mahamuni ashish wrote:
> int main()
> {
> float f= 1256.35;
> char ch[4];
>
> printf("\n1. f : %f",f);
> memset(ch,'\0',strlen(ch) );
Can't work. ch[]'s content is undefined, so strlen(ch) may read anywhere
in memory, and/or memset() write anywhere.
Xav
On Sep 27 2007 12:41, mahamuni ashish wrote:
>I have small code
This is not a kernel problem. (Read your C book and/or ask in
a C newsgroup.)
>char ch[4];
>memset(ch,'\0',strlen(ch) );
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I have small code
#include
#include
int main()
{
float f= 1256.35;
char ch[4];
printf("\n1. f : %f",f);
memset(ch,'\0',strlen(ch) );
printf("\n2. f : %f",f);
return 0;
}
Expected output is
1. f : 1256.35
2. f : 1256.35
But I am getting the output
(on windows)
1. f : 1256.35
2. f : 0.
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