> But there's nothing in that bit that implies (to me!) > "You can't subsequently call dirname(3) on the results of > a previous call to dirname(3)". You are calling dirname() on an argument that may be destroyed by that very call. You are calling dirname() on a possibly invalid argument.
- dirname(3) used on its own results? Simon Burge
- Re: dirname(3) used on its own results? Emmanuel Dreyfus
- Re: dirname(3) used on its own results? Edgar Fuß
- Re: dirname(3) used on its own results? Simon Burge
- Re: dirname(3) used on its own results? Edgar Fuß
- Re: dirname(3) used on its own results? Robert Elz
- Re: dirname(3) used on its own results? Emmanuel Dreyfus
- Re: dirname(3) used on its own results? Simon Burge
- Re: dirname(3) used on its own results? Robert Elz
- Re: dirname(3) used on its own results? maya
- Re: dirname(3) used on its own results? Simon Burge
- Re: dirname(3) used on its own results? Christos Zoulas
- Re: dirname(3) used on its own results? Robert Elz
- Re: dirname(3) used on its own results? Robert Elz