On Wednesday, 8 February 2017 08:52:32 UTC+2, Andrey Karpov wrote:
> On Monday, 6 February 2017 14:43:35 UTC+3, Öö Tiib wrote:
> > Everybody expects you to have biased opinion about your product.
> > As for neutral party ... all the text in article felt nonsensical and
> > religious.
> >
> > How your product detects if null pointer dereference was designed
> > maliciously to crash, or test of something else contains accidental
> > defect that may crash or crash was really part of requirements?
> > Are you making psychic software? :-D :-P Whatever it does, I don't
> > expect it to do that. So for me your program misbehaves, sorry.
>
> Everything is based on our experience of checking hundreds of projects:
http://www.viva64.com/en/examples/
The problem may be that you checked only with works of rehearsal
and/or beneficence.
> I suggest having a closer look at the description in the article. The
> criterion is the presence of AND in the title and strange code. When
> we say strange code we mean when NULL is assigned IMMEDIATELY
> and is dereferenced right after it. The statement itself
>
> T *x = 0;
>
> *x = 0;
>
> doesn't look natural.
I did read the article. Is it self-irony? Repeating same points
again and again do not make those any more correct.
Q: Does your software have say diagnostic #413 about "accidental-
looking null pointer dereference" and #417 about "willful-looking
null pointer dereference"?
A: No.
Q: So why you detect that willful-lookingness?
A: To silently filter out.
Q: Why? That is bad feature, how to turn it off?
A: There's no way.
Q: Wtf?
A:
> Please, understand that people don’t make such mistakes.
Q: Who told about mistakes? Everybody I know would *love*
to find out willful sabotage *even* *sooner* than accidental
mistakes.
I already wrote that. It is still quoted above. You just are with
fixed mindset and so can't read nor can reason about it.
<snip rest of the same repeated over and over>