On Thu, Aug 09, 2018 at 02:52:29PM -0700, Stefan Beller wrote: > > In many cases you can just do: > > > > while (list->nr) { > > work_on(list->items[list->nr - 1]); > > list_remove(list, list->nr - 1); > > } > > > > and then all of those memory ownership issues like: > > [...] > > > > just go away. :) > > The only complication here is the lack of list_remove(index), > we do have list_remove(string), which internally searches the > item and removes it. Hence I did not want to use it. Heh, I almost dug into that more. I think you could have helpers to spell the two lines above even more nicely: while (list->nr) { work_on(list_top(list)); list_pop(list); /* note this doesn't return anything! */ } But yes, it's not possible with the current functions. > Another idea I had was to keep the list immutable (except amending, > just like a constitution ;-) and store an index of how far we got in that > list already. That wastes memory for keeping entries around, but is safe > for memory due to its nature. You can also use a list.h linked-list. Then removal from the list and freeing are two separate operations (but it exercises your malloc a lot more if you're constantly pushing and popping). > > Where that falls down is if you really need work_on() to put more items > > on the stack, but only after you've removed the current top. But then > > writing it out may still be nicer, because it makes it clear you have to > > do: > > > > const char *cur_string = xstrdup(list->items[list->nr-1].string); > > Another way would be to use > > string_list_pop(&list, &string_dst, &util_dst); > i.e. > /* Returns 0 if the dst was filled */ > int (struct string_list *, char **, void**) > > as then we do not expose the internals and would not have issues > with reallocs. Yes, I almost suggested that, but there's the question of memory ownership of string_dst. Does it need freed or not? Is that answer dependent on the strdup_strings flag? > > if you want the data to live past the removal. > > In the code proposed there are no additions (hence no reallocs) > and the need for the data is short lived. > > But I can see how the design was just fitting my purpose and > we could come up with some better API. Yeah, I didn't actually dig into your use case. I just want to make sure we don't add a crappy function to our API. ;) -Peff