Am 22.11.2014 11:39, schrieb Love Nystrom:
And what comes out at the end of the compilation is what the compiler creates. And the compiler is following the rules of the C standard and the rules of logic.
On 2014-11-21 04.00, Timo Kreuzer wrote:
Am 20.11.2014 14:18, schrieb Love Nystrom:
No, it does not. It requries the compiler to generate code that executes the following statement, when f is not 0.
Well... Actually not exactly the same.. ;)
"if (f != FALSE)" requires an explicit comparison with a second operand,
I suspect we look at it from two different viewpoints here..
Yours is "C centric" and mine is "object code centric".
You talk about what the compiler is required to do,
and I talk about what comes out at the end of compilation.
You claimed '"if (f != FALSE)" requires an explicit comparison with a second operand,' and that is factually wrong. No matter whether you are looking at it from the compiler perspective or from the perspective of an expressionist painter living in a yellow tree house on the bottom of Lake Tanganyika.
Don't even get me started. I battled the grand master and I survived.
And.. dear friend.. don't turn this into a pissing contest.
Let's check the egos in with the coat check girl at the entrance.Are we talking about age or maturity?
May I ask how old you are?
We better end this discussion, it's not leading anywhere. And you don't want me to turn into the Grinch and steal your Christmas.
Thanks,
Timo
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