On 26.07.2017 02:35, Steven Schveighoffer wrote:
On 7/25/17 5:23 PM, Moritz Maxeiner wrote:
On Tuesday, 25 July 2017 at 20:16:41 UTC, Steven Schveighoffer wrote:
The behavior is defined. It will crash with a segfault.
In C land that behaviour is a platform (hardware/OS/libc) specific
implementation detail (it's what you generally expect to happen, but
AFAIK it isn't defined in official ISO/IEC C).
In cases where C does not crash when dereferencing null, then D would
not crash when dereferencing null. D depends on the hardware doing this
(Walter has said so many times), so if C doesn't do it, then D won't. So
those systems would have to be treated specially, and you'd have to work
out your own home-grown mechanism for memory safety.
What Moritz is saying is that the following implementation of fclose is
correct according to the C standard:
int fclose(FILE *stream){
if(stream == NULL){
go_wild_and_corrupt_all_the_memory();
}else{
actually_close_the_file(stream);
}
}