:: Re: [DNG] Pointer error in the back…
Inizio della pagina
Delete this message
Reply to this message
Autore: KatolaZ
Data:  
To: aitor_czr
CC: dng
Oggetto: Re: [DNG] Pointer error in the backend of Netman
On Fri, Dec 11, 2015 at 09:01:19AM +0100, aitor_czr wrote:
> Hi Katolaz,
>
> Here you are an example of two arguments (x,y) passed by reference:


[cut]

>
> void func(int *x, int *y)
> {
> int k = *x;
> *x = *y;
> *y = k;
> }
>
> This is the output:
>
> i = 1 j = 2
> i = 2 j = 1
>


Dear Aitor,

as many have already explained, this is not passing by reference, but
passing by value. Then it happens that the value is a pointer and, as
I already said in a previous email, this is a mechanism which *mimics*
a pass-by-reference through a pass-by-value. This is not being
pedantic, but calling things with their name, and avoiding
confusion. Pass-by-reference is what is normally used in Java or in
C++ (in the latter case, you have to use the "&" qualifier in the
signature of a function/method to signalling the choice between
pass-by-value and pass-by-reference).

C is one of the few remaining languages which is consistent about
allowing only one of the many possible argument passing
mechanisms. And the mechanism chosen by C is pass-by-value. Fullstop.


> On 12/10/2015 06:33 PM, dng-request@??? wrote:
> >On Thu, Dec 10, 2015 at 05:00:58PM +0100, aitor_czr wrote:
> >>>No, Katolaz, passing by value and passing by reference exist in C,
> >>>at least in C99.
> >>>
> >Could you please give a pointer to the place where this feature is
> >documented in the ANSI C99 standard?
>
> Passing by value and passing by reference in ANSI C99 are documented
> in the following book:
>
> C - The Complete Reference (by Herbert Schildt)
>


Oh dear, that explains a lot. Shitty book, IMHO, quite inaccurate,
full of mistakes and misconceptions, among which pass-by-reference is
just one little example. If you want to get a serious introduction to
C, then you are better off with the classical Kernighan & Ritchie,
which covers only C90, though. A good, competent, and complete
introduction to C99 is given in "C in a Nutshell", Prinz & Crawford,
O'Really (2005). But don't expect an easy read through either of them.

The best advice I have ever received about C is that I must not just
buy "any" book about C and assume it is "the bible" or represents
accurately what C is or is not. Except that book is the K&R.

HND

KatolaZ

--
[ Enzo Nicosia aka KatolaZ --- GLUG Catania -- Freaknet Medialab ]
[ me [at] katolaz.homeunix.net -- http://katolaz.homeunix.net -- ]
[ GNU/Linux User:#325780/ICQ UIN: #258332181/GPG key ID 0B5F062F ]
[ Fingerprint: 8E59 D6AA 445E FDB4 A153 3D5A 5F20 B3AE 0B5F 062F ]