Moore, Robert wrote:
This is an interesting one to me.
From various documentation:
After all arguments have been retrieved, va_end resets the pointer to
NULL.
va_end
Each invocation of va_start must be matched by a corresponding
invocation of va_end in the same function. After the call va_end(ap) the
variable ap is undefined. Multiple transversals of the list, each
bracketed by va_start and va_end are possible. va_end may be a macro or
a function.
Now, I'm all for defensive programming, but I don't really see the point
of va_end when the list will be only traversed once.
First off, I think it is a good idea to follow the documentation, which stated:
"va_end
Each invocation of va_start must be matched by a corresponding
invocation of va_end in the same function."
Then if it is not really needed, does it take up extra cycles?
"In practice, with most C compilers, calling |va_end| does nothing
and you do not really need to call it. This is always true in the GNU C
compiler."[1]
Portability:
"But you might as well call |va_end| just in case your
program is someday compiled with a peculiar compiler."[2]
This argument is not as likely thou, but who knows? (Since I guess Intel's
compiler is included in the 'most C compilers')
We don't set all local pointers to NULL at function exit, what is the
point of doing it here?
I think it is a good thing if the code follows the documentation, both
for the person who tries
to understand the code (to see when the 'args' is no longer needed and
not getting confused
by the absent of va_end(), after all, IMHO we should write the code how
we want things to
work and let the compiler do the optimizations (it usually does a better
job at it then we do))
and to automated searches (that is how I found this one).
I suppose some implementation could allocate memory at va_start, but in
practice, does this happen?
Not sure what you mean.
Bob
cu
Richard Knutsson
[1]
http://www.cs.utah.edu/dept/old/texinfo/glibc-manual-0.02/library_28.html
[2] The rest of [1]'s line.
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