* Function pointers and #defines @ 2002-05-30 19:32 Justin Carlson 2002-05-30 19:50 ` Daniel Jacobowitz 0 siblings, 1 reply; 6+ messages in thread From: Justin Carlson @ 2002-05-30 19:32 UTC (permalink / raw) To: linux-mips A fair number of places in the headers, we have stuff like this: void (*_some_fn)(int arg1, int arg2); #define some_fn(arg1, arg2) _some_fn(arg1, arg2) Why do we do this, as opposed to: void (*some_fn)(int arg1, int arg2); Both syntaxes result in being able to say some_fn(1, 2); but the latter is both clearer and shorter. Is there some deep, mystical C reason that we use the former, or did someone do it that way a long time ago and no one has changed it? -Justin ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 6+ messages in thread
* Re: Function pointers and #defines 2002-05-30 19:32 Function pointers and #defines Justin Carlson @ 2002-05-30 19:50 ` Daniel Jacobowitz 2002-05-30 19:58 ` Justin Carlson 2002-05-30 21:18 ` Kevin D. Kissell 0 siblings, 2 replies; 6+ messages in thread From: Daniel Jacobowitz @ 2002-05-30 19:50 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Justin Carlson; +Cc: linux-mips On Thu, May 30, 2002 at 12:32:47PM -0700, Justin Carlson wrote: > A fair number of places in the headers, we have stuff like this: > > void (*_some_fn)(int arg1, int arg2); > #define some_fn(arg1, arg2) _some_fn(arg1, arg2) > > Why do we do this, as opposed to: > > void (*some_fn)(int arg1, int arg2); > > Both syntaxes result in being able to say > > some_fn(1, 2); > > but the latter is both clearer and shorter. Is there some deep, > mystical C reason that we use the former, or did someone do it that way > a long time ago and no one has changed it? At a guess, this prevents taking the address of the function unintentionally... -- Daniel Jacobowitz Carnegie Mellon University MontaVista Software Debian GNU/Linux Developer ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 6+ messages in thread
* Re: Function pointers and #defines 2002-05-30 19:50 ` Daniel Jacobowitz @ 2002-05-30 19:58 ` Justin Carlson 2002-05-30 21:18 ` Kevin D. Kissell 1 sibling, 0 replies; 6+ messages in thread From: Justin Carlson @ 2002-05-30 19:58 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Daniel Jacobowitz; +Cc: linux-mips On Thu, 2002-05-30 at 12:50, Daniel Jacobowitz wrote: > > but the latter is both clearer and shorter. Is there some deep, > > mystical C reason that we use the former, or did someone do it that way > > a long time ago and no one has changed it? > > At a guess, this prevents taking the address of the function > unintentionally... But if you're writing code in such a way that the compiler type checking doesn't flag this, you deserve what you get. (IMHO, of course. :) -Justin ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 6+ messages in thread
* Re: Function pointers and #defines 2002-05-30 19:50 ` Daniel Jacobowitz 2002-05-30 19:58 ` Justin Carlson @ 2002-05-30 21:18 ` Kevin D. Kissell 2002-05-30 21:18 ` Kevin D. Kissell 2002-05-31 9:15 ` Gleb O. Raiko 1 sibling, 2 replies; 6+ messages in thread From: Kevin D. Kissell @ 2002-05-30 21:18 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Daniel Jacobowitz, Justin Carlson; +Cc: linux-mips From: "Daniel Jacobowitz" <dan@debian.org> > On Thu, May 30, 2002 at 12:32:47PM -0700, Justin Carlson wrote: > > A fair number of places in the headers, we have stuff like this: > > > > void (*_some_fn)(int arg1, int arg2); > > #define some_fn(arg1, arg2) _some_fn(arg1, arg2) > > > > Why do we do this, as opposed to: > > > > void (*some_fn)(int arg1, int arg2); > > > > Both syntaxes result in being able to say > > > > some_fn(1, 2); > > > > but the latter is both clearer and shorter. Is there some deep, > > mystical C reason that we use the former, or did someone do it that way > > a long time ago and no one has changed it? > > At a guess, this prevents taking the address of the function > unintentionally... More likely, some ancient early version of the code was written with a single global function, some_fn(), and it was easier to override it with a pointer indirection in the header than to hunt down and change all invocations. Sometimes that's good software engineering. Sometimes it's just laziness... Kevin K. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 6+ messages in thread
* Re: Function pointers and #defines 2002-05-30 21:18 ` Kevin D. Kissell @ 2002-05-30 21:18 ` Kevin D. Kissell 2002-05-31 9:15 ` Gleb O. Raiko 1 sibling, 0 replies; 6+ messages in thread From: Kevin D. Kissell @ 2002-05-30 21:18 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Daniel Jacobowitz, Justin Carlson; +Cc: linux-mips From: "Daniel Jacobowitz" <dan@debian.org> > On Thu, May 30, 2002 at 12:32:47PM -0700, Justin Carlson wrote: > > A fair number of places in the headers, we have stuff like this: > > > > void (*_some_fn)(int arg1, int arg2); > > #define some_fn(arg1, arg2) _some_fn(arg1, arg2) > > > > Why do we do this, as opposed to: > > > > void (*some_fn)(int arg1, int arg2); > > > > Both syntaxes result in being able to say > > > > some_fn(1, 2); > > > > but the latter is both clearer and shorter. Is there some deep, > > mystical C reason that we use the former, or did someone do it that way > > a long time ago and no one has changed it? > > At a guess, this prevents taking the address of the function > unintentionally... More likely, some ancient early version of the code was written with a single global function, some_fn(), and it was easier to override it with a pointer indirection in the header than to hunt down and change all invocations. Sometimes that's good software engineering. Sometimes it's just laziness... Kevin K. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 6+ messages in thread
* Re: Function pointers and #defines 2002-05-30 21:18 ` Kevin D. Kissell 2002-05-30 21:18 ` Kevin D. Kissell @ 2002-05-31 9:15 ` Gleb O. Raiko 1 sibling, 0 replies; 6+ messages in thread From: Gleb O. Raiko @ 2002-05-31 9:15 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Kevin D. Kissell; +Cc: Daniel Jacobowitz, Justin Carlson, linux-mips "Kevin D. Kissell" wrote: > > From: "Daniel Jacobowitz" <dan@debian.org> > > On Thu, May 30, 2002 at 12:32:47PM -0700, Justin Carlson wrote: > > > A fair number of places in the headers, we have stuff like this: > > > > > > void (*_some_fn)(int arg1, int arg2); > > > #define some_fn(arg1, arg2) _some_fn(arg1, arg2) > > > > > > Why do we do this, as opposed to: > > > > > > void (*some_fn)(int arg1, int arg2); > > > > > > Both syntaxes result in being able to say > > > > > > some_fn(1, 2); > > > > > > but the latter is both clearer and shorter. Is there some deep, > > > mystical C reason that we use the former, or did someone do it that way > > > a long time ago and no one has changed it? > > > > At a guess, this prevents taking the address of the function > > unintentionally... > > More likely, some ancient early version of the code was > written with a single global function, some_fn(), and it > was easier to override it with a pointer indirection in > the header than to hunt down and change all invocations. > Sometimes that's good software engineering. Sometimes > it's just laziness... > > Kevin K. Just remove the declaration, compile, and look at the code generated. So, #define is just a safety belt. Regards, Gleb. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 6+ messages in thread
end of thread, other threads:[~2002-05-31 9:13 UTC | newest] Thread overview: 6+ messages (download: mbox.gz follow: Atom feed -- links below jump to the message on this page -- 2002-05-30 19:32 Function pointers and #defines Justin Carlson 2002-05-30 19:50 ` Daniel Jacobowitz 2002-05-30 19:58 ` Justin Carlson 2002-05-30 21:18 ` Kevin D. Kissell 2002-05-30 21:18 ` Kevin D. Kissell 2002-05-31 9:15 ` Gleb O. Raiko
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