On Thu, 2009-06-04 at 11:27 +0200, Hans Verkuil wrote: > > On Thu, 2009-06-04 at 11:18 +0200, Laurent Pinchart wrote: > >> Hi, > >> > >> On Thursday 04 June 2009 06:20:07 figo.zhang wrote: > >> > The function video_register_device() will call the > >> > video_register_device_index(). In this function, firtly it will do > >> some > >> > argments check , if failed,it will return a negative number such as > >> > -EINVAL, and then do cdev_alloc() and device_register(), if success > >> return > >> > zero. so video_register_device_index() canot return a a positive > >> number. > >> > > >> > for example, see the drivers/media/video/stk-webcam.c (line 1325): > >> > > >> > err = video_register_device(&dev->vdev, VFL_TYPE_GRABBER, -1); > >> > if (err) > >> > STK_ERROR("v4l registration failed\n"); > >> > else > >> > STK_INFO("Syntek USB2.0 Camera is now controlling video device" > >> > " /dev/video%d\n", dev->vdev.num); > >> > > >> > in my opinion, it will be cleaner to do something like this: > >> > > >> > err = video_register_device(&dev->vdev, VFL_TYPE_GRABBER, -1); > >> > if (err != 0) > >> > STK_ERROR("v4l registration failed\n"); > >> > else > >> > STK_INFO("Syntek USB2.0 Camera is now controlling video device" > >> > " /dev/video%d\n", dev->vdev.num); > >> > >> What's the difference ? (err != 0) and (err) are identical. > >> > >> Best regards, > >> > >> Laurent Pinchart > > > > yes, it is the same, but it is easy for reading. > > To be honest, I think '(err)' is easier to read. Unless there is some new > CodingStyle rule I'm not aware of I see no reason for applying these > changes. > > Regards, > > Hans > yes, but i found the the kernel code using the '(err != 0) or (err == 0)' is more popular,in v4l code for example: v4l1-compat.c line 507 v4l2-int-device.c line 52 arv.c line 333 arv.c line 844,856 videobuf-core.c line 529,766,984,1002,1053 videobuf-dma-sg.c line 211,222,248,350,456,671, ..... so i dont know which style is recommended for kernel code? Best Regards, Figo.zhang -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-media" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html