August 27, 2003 From comp.lang.c++.moderated - a (very long!) discussion about D | ||||
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David Abrahams <dave@boost-consulting.com> wrote in message news:<uvfskfk54.fsf@boost-consulting.com>... > stlsoft@hotmail.com (Matthew Wilson) writes: > > > I've argued in the past to Walter that the expression x == y should be rewritten by the compiler as > > > > (x !== null && y !== null) > > ? x.eq(y) > > : false > > So null != null? He, he. I've never tried it. Trying now ... ... Bizarre. The following code class X {}; int main(char[][] args) { if(null != null) { printf("null Different\n"); } else { printf("null Same\n"); } X x1; X x2; if(x1 != x1) { printf("X Different\n"); } else { printf("X Same\n"); } return 0; } prints "null Same" "Error: Access Violation" which is a surprise to me, as I'd expected an access violation for both. This is inconsistent, to say the least. (I shall post this on D ng now, methinks). This is a constant beef between me Walter. It's a curious battle, since I have right on my side, and he has absolute authority on his. (Kind of like being married <g>) Matthew Wilson STLSoft moderator and C++ monomaniac mailto:matthew@stlsoft.org http://www.stlsoft.org news://news.digitalmars.com/c++.stlsoft "You can tell a Yorkshireman, but you can't tell him much!" -- Uncle Michael ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- --- |
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