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Groups > comp.lang.c > #152647
| From | Tim Rentsch <tr.17687@z991.linuxsc.com> |
|---|---|
| Newsgroups | comp.lang.c |
| Subject | Re: longer 'char literals' meaning in c |
| Date | 2020-06-03 09:08 -0700 |
| Organization | A noiseless patient Spider |
| Message-ID | <86blm0p1wq.fsf@linuxsc.com> (permalink) |
| References | (8 earlier) <87tv104ij2.fsf@nosuchdomain.example.com> <4lKqG.254784$mk2.321@fx21.am4> <87lfmc4dwh.fsf@nosuchdomain.example.com> <r8qd3b$hmi$1@z-news.wcss.wroc.pl> <r8qntq$p8s$1@dont-email.me> |
James Kuyper <jameskuyper@alumni.caltech.edu> writes: > Note: exceeding the minimum implementation limits for integers does > not, in itself, prevent a program from being strictly conforming. > Any program that involves an int value that is outside of the range > -32767 to 32767 exceeds those limits, but a strictly conforming > program can do that, so long as it does so only when compiled on > implementations where INT_MIN or INT_MAX is large enough. So long > as the observable behavior does not depend upon the values of > INT_MIN and INT_MAX, it's perfectly fine for the unobservable part > of the program's behavior does depend on those values. This claim is not consistent with the plain reading of text in the Standard's definition, in 4 p5, of strictly conforming program. Note the second sentence. Breaking apart the two independent clauses, and substituting for the pronoun "It", the second clause says "A strictly conforming program shall not exceed any minimum implementation limit." There is nothing there about output or observable behavior. The clauses are independent because of how the sentence is constructed, which means each must be true independently of the other. Exceeding a minimum implementation limit always means a program is not strictly conforming, even if that has no effect on program output. If you want to argue that what the authors meant is something other than what a plain reading says, fine, please go ahead and make that argument. At face value though the Standard rules out any program that exceeds a minimum implementation limit from being a strictly conforming program, regardless of whether the act of exceeding has any effect on program output.
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Re: longer 'char literals' meaning in c Tim Rentsch <tr.17687@z991.linuxsc.com> - 2020-06-03 09:08 -0700
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