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Re: [bug-gnulib] warnings with gl_anylinked_list
From: |
Bruno Haible |
Subject: |
Re: [bug-gnulib] warnings with gl_anylinked_list |
Date: |
Tue, 10 Oct 2006 15:18:39 +0200 |
User-agent: |
KMail/1.9.1 |
Ralf Wildenhues wrote:
> you should not used `index' at
> all: eventually, you'll be including strings.h and getting warnings due
> to this (seen on GNU/Linux):
>
> | NAME
> | index, rindex - locate character in string
> |
> | SYNOPSIS
> | #include <strings.h>
> |
> | char *index(const char *s, int c);
> [...]
> | CONFORMING TO
> | 4.3BSD
No, there is no reason nowadays (for several years already) to
#include <strings.h>.
- All systems have a <string.h> that define memset, memcpy etc. -
more portable than bzero, bcopy, etc.
- Likewise for index() and rindex(), which have a more portable alternative
called strchr() and strrchr().
- The strcasecmp() and strncasecmp() functions declared there don't work
in multibyte locales.
- The ffs() function has a more portable (and sometimes faster)
implementation that converts to a 'double' and extracts the
exponent from its binary representation.
And so we are free to use 'index' as a variable name.
Bruno