It's not the compiler's job to tell you what you want, it's your job to tell it! The -Wall flag doesn't mean, "warn me about every possible stupid construct I can come up with."
In all seriousness, if you don't get over using a "greater than or equal" construct for loop termination, you're going to be in a world of hurt if STL containers ever cross your transom. Just don't do that, and everything will be fine. Matt On Tue, Apr 20, 2010 at 7:44 PM, Brian Lavender <br...@brie.com> wrote: > On Tue, Apr 20, 2010 at 06:54:33PM -0700, Bill Broadley wrote: >> On 04/20/2010 06:37 PM, Brian Lavender wrote: >> > Our new guy (forget his name, doh!) and I figured out the problem with >> > my loop that would count down, but not terminate. Turns out I was using >> > an unsigned integer for my counter in my for loop and it is always >> > greater than zero (Example 1). >> >> No, it's not always greater than zero. Your test says i>=0 so if it's >> greater than or equal to zero it continues. Seems like you want i>0. > > Sorry, I meant to say it's always greater than or equal than zero. zero > minus 1 is 4294967295 (0xffffffff) on a 32 bit machine. It can never go > negative because it is unsigned and the loop will never terminate. Thus, > I am thinking that the compiler could catch this due to the fact that i > is unsigned. I wanted to print out the reverse of an array. > > If you run the following, the loop will never terminate. > > #include <stdio.h> > > int main() { > int a[] = {5,6,8,3,4}; > unsigned int i; > > > for (i= (sizeof(a) -1)/sizeof(int) ; i >= 0; i--) { > printf("%d\n",a[i]); > } > > return 0; > } > >> >> > Funny thing is that -Wall didn't catch this. Seems that -Wall could >> > catch this assuming that we want to loop to terminate. Any thoughts? >> >> Seems strange, but legal to do what you wanted. >> >> > Say the compiler gave a warning, would that mess up the "for (;;)" >> > construct shown in Example 2? >> > >> > brian >> > >> > // Example 1 >> > // Loop never terminates >> > #include<stdio.h> >> > >> > int main() { >> > unsigned int i, num=50; >> > >> > >> > for (i= num ; i>= 0; i--) { >> > printf("%u\n",i); >> > } >> > >> > return 0; >> > } >> > >> > // Example 2 >> > // Purposely never terminates >> > #include<stdio.h> >> > >> > int main() { >> > for (;;) { >> > printf("Hello forever\n"); >> > } >> > return 0; >> > } > > > > -- > Brian Lavender > http://www.brie.com/brian/ > > "For every complex problem there is an answer that is clear, simple, and > wrong." > - H. L. Mencken > _______________________________________________ > vox-tech mailing list > vox-tech@lists.lugod.org > http://lists.lugod.org/mailman/listinfo/vox-tech > _______________________________________________ vox-tech mailing list vox-tech@lists.lugod.org http://lists.lugod.org/mailman/listinfo/vox-tech