* various meanings of static @ 2007-06-23 6:08 Shriramana Sharma 2007-06-23 12:55 ` Darío Mariani 0 siblings, 1 reply; 6+ messages in thread From: Shriramana Sharma @ 2007-06-23 6:08 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Linux C Programming List Hello. To my thinking, the keyword static is used for four different purposes in C++. I will explain this and I request your comments on that: 1. "static" is used in the declarations at file scope of variables and functions to make them "local" -- i.e. visible only within that file. 2. "static" is used in the declarations of variables inside functions to make them "sticky" -- i.e. not get destroyed when the function is exit. They "stick" around. 3. "static" is used in the declarations of variables inside classes to make them "classwide" -- i.e. common to all instances of that class, in contrast with other member variables which are unique to each instance. 4. "static" is used in the declarations of functions inside classes to make them "nothis" -- i.e. not take/require a silent "this" pointer to be passed, and hence be able to be called without an instance of that class to exist. I am thinking of using # define-s to use these four words: local, sticky, classwide, nothis instead of static in my C++ programs to make them more meaningful. I believe that the above four are mutually distinct purposes of the single static keyword and whether a future C++ standard disambiguates these purposes or not (where I prefer it would) I can even now use these new clearer keywords. Are there any other meanings to static? Or are there any objections to the above classification? Thank you. Shriramana Sharma. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 6+ messages in thread
* Re: various meanings of static 2007-06-23 6:08 various meanings of static Shriramana Sharma @ 2007-06-23 12:55 ` Darío Mariani 2007-06-23 16:11 ` Glynn Clements 0 siblings, 1 reply; 6+ messages in thread From: Darío Mariani @ 2007-06-23 12:55 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Linux C Programming List On 6/23/07, Shriramana Sharma <samjnaa@gmail.com> wrote: > Hello. > > ... > > I am thinking of using # define-s to use these four words: > > local, sticky, classwide, nothis > > instead of static in my C++ programs to make them more meaningful. I > believe that the above four are mutually distinct purposes of the single > static keyword and whether a future C++ standard disambiguates these > purposes or not (where I prefer it would) I can even now use these new > clearer keywords. IMHO, I think it's not a good idea to add your own keywords to your code. This will make it harder for anyone else to read it. Darío - To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-c-programming" in the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 6+ messages in thread
* Re: various meanings of static 2007-06-23 12:55 ` Darío Mariani @ 2007-06-23 16:11 ` Glynn Clements 2007-06-24 21:08 ` Pedro de Medeiros 0 siblings, 1 reply; 6+ messages in thread From: Glynn Clements @ 2007-06-23 16:11 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Linux C Programming List Darío Mariani wrote: > > I am thinking of using # define-s to use these four words: > > > > local, sticky, classwide, nothis > > > > instead of static in my C++ programs to make them more meaningful. I > > believe that the above four are mutually distinct purposes of the single > > static keyword and whether a future C++ standard disambiguates these > > purposes or not (where I prefer it would) I can even now use these new > > clearer keywords. > > IMHO, I think it's not a good idea to add your own keywords to your > code. This will make it harder for anyone else to read it. It also makes it harder for software (other than the compiler) to read it. It isn't enough that the compiler can understand the code. It also needs to be understood by text editors, lint, indent, etc. Such programs invariably use syntax which doesn't exactly match the definition of the language. The C preprocessor makes that almost inevitable. Remember, source files are what goes *in* to the preprocessor, while the syntax of C (the structured grammar written in BNF in the appendix of any decent C textbook) describes what comes *out* of the preprocessor. In practice, most programs (other than the compiler) which attempt to parse C (e.g. text editors which perform syntax highlighting, indentation, etc) simply ignore preprocessor directives and assume that any names are simply variable/function/field/tag names, not macro names. If you cause this assumption to fail, someone will get bitten. -- Glynn Clements <glynn@gclements.plus.com> - To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-c-programming" in the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 6+ messages in thread
* Re: various meanings of static 2007-06-23 16:11 ` Glynn Clements @ 2007-06-24 21:08 ` Pedro de Medeiros 2007-06-25 21:35 ` Glynn Clements 0 siblings, 1 reply; 6+ messages in thread From: Pedro de Medeiros @ 2007-06-24 21:08 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Glynn Clements; +Cc: Linux C Programming List On 6/23/07, Glynn Clements <glynn@gclements.plus.com> wrote: > > Darío Mariani wrote: > > > > I am thinking of using # define-s to use these four words: > > > > > > local, sticky, classwide, nothis > > > > > > instead of static in my C++ programs to make them more meaningful. I > > > believe that the above four are mutually distinct purposes of the single > > > static keyword and whether a future C++ standard disambiguates these > > > purposes or not (where I prefer it would) I can even now use these new > > > clearer keywords. > > > > IMHO, I think it's not a good idea to add your own keywords to your > > code. This will make it harder for anyone else to read it. > > It also makes it harder for software (other than the compiler) to read > it. > > It isn't enough that the compiler can understand the code. It also > needs to be understood by text editors, lint, indent, etc. Such > programs invariably use syntax which doesn't exactly match the > definition of the language. > > The C preprocessor makes that almost inevitable. Remember, source > files are what goes *in* to the preprocessor, while the syntax of C > (the structured grammar written in BNF in the appendix of any decent C > textbook) describes what comes *out* of the preprocessor. > > In practice, most programs (other than the compiler) which attempt to > parse C (e.g. text editors which perform syntax highlighting, > indentation, etc) simply ignore preprocessor directives and assume > that any names are simply variable/function/field/tag names, not macro > names. > > If you cause this assumption to fail, someone will get bitten. The problem is that some people already consider a good practice to create their own 'decorators' when they use GCC extensions, but they need to turn them off when the compiler doesn't support such features. Consider this, for instance: #ifdef __GNUC__ #define format(si, ftc) __attribute__ ((format(printf(si, ftc))) #define internal __attribute__ ((visibility("hidden"))) #define public __attribute__ ((visibility("default"))) #define useful __attribute__ ((warn_unused_result)) #else #define format(si, ftc) #define internal #define public #define useful #endif Some of those 'decorators' are valuable assets when detecting code mistakes, maintaining library encapsulation and whatnot. Not using #defines is not an option, since other compilers may not support those GCC extensions. Should we discard them because some highlighting editors don't know what to do with them? Cheers, Pedro. -- Pedro de Medeiros - Ciência da Computação - Universidade de Brasília Home Page: http://www.nonseq.net - Linux User No.: 234250 - To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-c-programming" in the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 6+ messages in thread
* Re: various meanings of static 2007-06-24 21:08 ` Pedro de Medeiros @ 2007-06-25 21:35 ` Glynn Clements 2007-06-25 23:01 ` Pedro de Medeiros 0 siblings, 1 reply; 6+ messages in thread From: Glynn Clements @ 2007-06-25 21:35 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Pedro de Medeiros; +Cc: Linux C Programming List Pedro de Medeiros wrote: > The problem is that some people already consider a good practice to > create their own 'decorators' when they use GCC extensions, but they > need to turn them off when the compiler doesn't support such features. > Consider this, for instance: > > #ifdef __GNUC__ > #define format(si, ftc) __attribute__ ((format(printf(si, ftc))) > #define internal __attribute__ ((visibility("hidden"))) > #define public __attribute__ ((visibility("default"))) > #define useful __attribute__ ((warn_unused_result)) > #else > #define format(si, ftc) > #define internal > #define public > #define useful > #endif > > Some of those 'decorators' are valuable assets when detecting code > mistakes, maintaining library encapsulation and whatnot. Not using > #defines is not an option, since other compilers may not support those > GCC extensions. The usual solution is to use __attribute__ directly, and redefine that for non-gcc compilers, e.g.: #if !defined __GNUC__ || __GNUC__ < 2 #undef __attribute__ #define __attribute__(x) #endif > Should we discard them because some highlighting > editors don't know what to do with them? In the specific case of defining macros for gcc attributes, the impact upon human-readability is the main factor against using them. In terms of machine-readability, the macros are no worse than explicit __attribute__ declarations. Using the preprocessor to create a project-specific language is seldom as good an idea as it may seem at the time, as you tend to end up with code which only the author understands. In general, to be able to work on a C source file should only require knowledge of C along with the types, variables and functions used by that particular file. Having to be familiar with a large number of project-specific conventions and idioms before you can touch anything tends to result in code which is hard to maintain. E.g. one of the coding conventions for the Linux kernel is that typedefs aren't used for structure or pointer types, so that variables which contain structures or pointers can be readily identified from their declaration alone. -- Glynn Clements <glynn@gclements.plus.com> ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 6+ messages in thread
* Re: various meanings of static 2007-06-25 21:35 ` Glynn Clements @ 2007-06-25 23:01 ` Pedro de Medeiros 0 siblings, 0 replies; 6+ messages in thread From: Pedro de Medeiros @ 2007-06-25 23:01 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Glynn Clements; +Cc: Linux C Programming List On 6/25/07, Glynn Clements <glynn@gclements.plus.com> wrote: > > Using the preprocessor to create a project-specific language is seldom > as good an idea as it may seem at the time, as you tend to end up with > code which only the author understands. > > In general, to be able to work on a C source file should only require > knowledge of C along with the types, variables and functions used by > that particular file. Having to be familiar with a large number of > project-specific conventions and idioms before you can touch anything > tends to result in code which is hard to maintain. Yes, now I agree. Well, if macros are not worse than __attribute__ declarations for machine-readability and if you acknowledge their usefulness, then maybe you should have given the reason above in the first place. ;-) Cheers, Pedro. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 6+ messages in thread
end of thread, other threads:[~2007-06-25 23:01 UTC | newest] Thread overview: 6+ messages (download: mbox.gz follow: Atom feed -- links below jump to the message on this page -- 2007-06-23 6:08 various meanings of static Shriramana Sharma 2007-06-23 12:55 ` Darío Mariani 2007-06-23 16:11 ` Glynn Clements 2007-06-24 21:08 ` Pedro de Medeiros 2007-06-25 21:35 ` Glynn Clements 2007-06-25 23:01 ` Pedro de Medeiros
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