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February 24, 2008 [Issue 1865] New: Escape sequences are flawed. | ||||
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http://d.puremagic.com/issues/show_bug.cgi?id=1865 Summary: Escape sequences are flawed. Product: D Version: 1.027 Platform: PC OS/Version: Linux Status: NEW Severity: critical Priority: P1 Component: DMD AssignedTo: bugzilla@digitalmars.com ReportedBy: aziz.kerim@gmail.com The specs state (http://www.digitalmars.com/d/1.0/lex.html): "Although string literals are defined to be composed of UTF characters, the octal and hex escape sequences allow the insertion of arbitrary binary data." This holds true for normal string literals (e.g. "abc") but not for escape string literals. For instance: auto str = \xDB; pragma(msg, typeof(str).stringof); // Should be char[1u] but prints: char[2u] auto str2 = "\xDB"; pragma(msg, typeof(str2).stringof); // Prints: char[1u] static assert(\xDB == "\xDB"); // Should be equal, but aren't. I also found out that octal escape sequences are fundamentally flawed. The highest possible octal value is 0777 which equals 0x1FF in hex. It seems like dmd doesn't know this. pragma(msg, '\777'.stringof); // Prints: '\xff' static assert('\777' == 0x1FF); // Shouldn't fail. static assert('\777' == 0xFF); // Shouldn't pass. static assert('\377' == 0xFF); // Passes as they are really equal. As we can see values from 0400 to 0777 need two bytes to be represented correctly. Therefore, when the lexer encounters string literals like \400 to \777 or "\400" to "\777" then it must use two bytes to encode it into the string value. Example: char[2] str = \777; static assert(str[0] == 1 && str[1] == 0xFF); I think it's appropriate to mark this bug report as critical. -- |
February 24, 2008 [Issue 1865] Escape sequences are flawed. | ||||
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Posted in reply to d-bugmail | http://d.puremagic.com/issues/show_bug.cgi?id=1865 ------- Comment #1 from aziz.kerim@gmail.com 2008-02-24 16:43 ------- I changed my mind regarding the octal escape sequences. I looked at how Python deals with it and also asked in the #python channel. In Python "\777" also results in "\xFF". I was told that 0ooo and \ooo are two different kind of things, the first one being an integer and the second one being a character. So never mind anymore the second part of my original posting. -- |
February 24, 2008 Re: [Issue 1865] New: Escape sequences are flawed. | ||||
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Posted in reply to d-bugmail | On 24/02/2008, d-bugmail@puremagic.com <d-bugmail@puremagic.com> wrote:
> The highest possible octal value is 0777 which equals 0x1FF in hex. It seems
> like dmd doesn't know this.
Wait, wait, wait. Shouldn't the highest possible octal value be 0377?
That is, shouldn't we just /disallow/ 0400 to 0777 inclusive?
The whole point is to define a BYTE, after all.
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February 25, 2008 [Issue 1865] Escape sequences are flawed. | ||||
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Posted in reply to d-bugmail | http://d.puremagic.com/issues/show_bug.cgi?id=1865 ------- Comment #3 from aziz.kerim@gmail.com 2008-02-25 11:21 ------- (In reply to comment #2) > On 24/02/2008, d-bugmail@puremagic.com <d-bugmail@puremagic.com> wrote: The whole point is to define a BYTE, after all. Good objection. I think we could compare this to Unicode escape sequences. The compiler complains when you specify values higher than \U0010FFFF (highest codepoint.) Likewise, the compiler should probably give an error for octal escape sequences higher than \377. At the moment, it doesn't feel quite right that anything higher than \377 is silently treated as 0xFF. Other languages apparently don't report an error or throw an exception, but I vote that a D compiler should report one. -- |
March 07, 2008 [Issue 1865] Escape sequences are flawed. | ||||
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Posted in reply to d-bugmail | http://d.puremagic.com/issues/show_bug.cgi?id=1865 bugzilla@digitalmars.com changed: What |Removed |Added ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- Status|NEW |RESOLVED Resolution| |FIXED ------- Comment #4 from bugzilla@digitalmars.com 2008-03-07 00:34 ------- Fixed dmd 1.028 and 2.012 -- |
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