On 15-05-2012 18:19, Gor Gyolchanyan wrote:


On Tue, May 15, 2012 at 7:51 PM, Christophe
<[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:

    using printf will lead to a bug each time the programmer forget the
    trailing
    \0.


First of all, printf shouldn't be used! There's writef and it's superior
to printf in any way!

Nope. write* perform GC allocation.

Second of all, if the zero-termination of literals are to be removed,
the literals will no longer be accepted as a pointer to a character.
The appropriate type mismatch error will force the user to use toUTF8z
to get ht e zero-terminated utf-8 version of the original string.
In case it's a literal, one could use the compile-time version of
toUTF8z to avoid run-time overhead.
This all doesn't sound like a bad idea to me. I don't see any security
or performance flaws in this scheme.
--
Bye,
Gor Gyolchanyan.

You're assuming everyone uses Phobos. This is not the case.

--
Alex Rønne Petersen
[email protected]
http://lycus.org

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