November 11, 2014
On Saturday, 8 November 2014 at 15:51:59 UTC, Gary Willoughby wrote:
> This is really cool, (and at the risk of sounding foolish) what is the benefit of doing this?

It turns segfault into normal exception with a stack trace, so you see where it failed right away.
November 11, 2014
On 11/11/14 10:14 AM, Kagamin wrote:
> On Friday, 7 November 2014 at 03:45:23 UTC, Steven Schveighoffer wrote:
>> In an environment that you don't control, the default behavior is
>> likely to print "Segmentation Fault" and exit. No core dump, no nothing.
>
> If you let the exception propagate into OS, by default Windows creates
> memory dump.

Windows is a different story. You actually get a reasonable result.

On Unix flavors, you get a signal, and by default, an exit, with the following message:

Segmentation fault
prompt>

No history, no core dump (generally this is off by default), no information as to where it occurred, why it occurred. Nothing.

-Steve
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