The ten Commandments for C Programmers (Annotated Edition)
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
1. Thou shalt run lint frequently and study its pronouncements with care, for verily its perception and judgement oft exceed thine.
This is still wise counsel, although many modern compilers search out many of the
same sins, and there are often problems with lint being aged and infirm, or
unavailable in strange lands. There are other tools, such as Saber C, useful to
similar ends.
"Frequently" means thou shouldst draw thy daily guidance from it, rather than
hoping thy code will achieve lint's blessing by a sudden act of repentance at the last
minute. De-linting a program which has never been linted before is often a cleaning
of the stables such as thou wouldst not wish on thy worst enemies. Some observe,
also, that careful heed to the words of lint can be quite helpful in debugging.
"Study" doth not mean mindless zeal to eradicate every byte of lint output-if for no
other reason, because thou just canst not shut it up about some things-but that thou
should know the cause of its unhappiness and unders?and what worrisome sign it
tries to speak of.
Go To Top
2. Thou shalt not follow the NULL pointer, for chaos and madness await thee at its end.
Clearly the holy scriptures were mis-transcribed here, as the words should have
been "null pointer", to minimize confusion between the concept of null pointers and
the macro NULL (of which more anon).
Otherwise, the meaning is plain. A null pointer points to regions filled with
dragons, demons, core dumps, and numberless other foul creatures, all of
which delight in frolicing in thy program if thou disturb their sleep. A null pointer doth
not point to a 0 of any type, despite some blasphemous old code which impiously
assumes this.
Go To Top
3. Thou shalt cast all function arguments to the expected type if they are not of that type already, even when thou art convinced that this is unnecessary, lest they take cruel vengeance upon
thee when thou least expect it.
A programmer should understand the type structure of his language, lest great
misfortune befall him. Contrary to the heresies espoused by some of the dwellers
on the Western Shore, mt! and 'long' are not the same type. The moment of their
equivalence in size and representation is short, and the agony that awaits believers
in their interchangeability shall last forever and ever once 64-bit machines become
common.
Also, contrary to the beliefs common among the more backward inhabitants of
the Polluted Eastern Marshes, 'NULL' does not have a pointer type, and must be cast to
the correct type whenever it is used as a function argument.
(The words of the prophet Ansi, which permit NULL to be defined as having the
type 'void ~', are oft taken out of context and misunderstood. The prophet was
granting a special dispensation for use in cases of great hardship in wild lands.
Verily, a righteous program must make its own way through the Thicket Of Types
without lazily relying on this rarely available dispensation to solve all its
problems. In any event, the great deitv Dmr who created C hath wisely endowed it with
many types of pointers, not just one, and thus it would still be necessary to convert
the prophet1s NULL to the desired type.)
It may be thought that the radical new blessing of '~prototypes" might eliminate
the need for caution about argument types. Not so, brethren. Firstly, when confronted
with the twisted strangeness of variable numbers of arguments, the problem
returns... and he who has not kept his faith strong by repeated practice shall surely fall
to this subtle trap. Secondly, the wise men have observed that reliance on prototypes
doth open many doors to strange errors, and some indeed had hoped that prototypes
would be decreed for purposes of error checking but would not cause implicit
conversions. Lastly, reliance on prototypes causeth great difficulty in the Real World
today, when many cling to the old ways and the old compilers out of desire or
necessity, and no man knoweth what machine his code may be asked to run on
tomorrow.
Go To Top
4. If thy header files fail to declare the return types of thy library functions, thou shalt declare them thyself with the most meticulous care, lest grievous harm befall thy program.
The prophet Ansi, in her wisdom, hath added that thou shouldst also scourge thy
Suppliers, and demand on pain of excommunication that they produce header
files that declare their library functions. For truly, only they know the precise form of
the incantation appropriate to invoking their magic in the optimal way.
The prophet hath also commented that it is unwise, and leads one into the pits of
damnation and subtle bugs, to attempt to declare such functions thyself when thy
header files do the job right.
Go To Top
5. Thou shalt check the array bounds of all strings (indeed, all arrays), for surely where thou typest "fbo" someone someday shall type "supercalifragilisticexpialidocious".
As demonstrated by the deeds of the Great Worm, a consequence of this
commandment is that robust production software should never make use of
gets (), for it is truly a tool of the Devil.
Thy interfaces should always inform thy servants of the bounds of thy arrays, and
servants who spurn such advice or quietly fail to follow it should be dispatched
forthwith to the Land Of Rm, where they can do no further harm to thee.
Go To Top
6. If a function be advertised to return an error code in the event of difficulties, thou shalt check for that code, yea, even though the checks triple the size of thy code and produce aches in thy typing fingers, for if thou thinkest ~~it cannot happen to me", the gods shall surely punish thee for thy arrogance.
All true believers doth wish for a better error-handling mechanism, for explicit
checks of return codes are tiresome in the extreme and the temptation to omit them is
great. But until the far-off day of deliverance cometh, one must walk the
long and winding road with patience and care, for thy Vendor, thy Machine, and thy
Software delight in surprises and think nothing of producing subtly meaningless
results on the day before thy Thesis Oral or thy Big Pitch To The Client.
Occasionally, as with the ferror () feature of stdio, it is possible to defer error
checking until the end when a cumulative result can be tested, and this often
produceth code which is shorter and clearer. Also, even the most zealous
believer should exercise some judgement when dealing with functions whose failure
is totally uninteresting... but beware, for the cast to void is a two-edged sword that
sheddeth thine own blood without remorse.
Go To Top
7. Thou shalt study thy libraries and strive not to reinvent them without cause, that thy code may be short and readable and thy days pleasant and productive.
Numberless are the unwashed heathen who scorn their libraries on various silly and
spurious grounds, such as blind worship of the Little Tin God (also known as
"Efficiency'). While it is true that some features of the C libraries were ill-advised,
by and large it is better and cheaper to use the works of others than to persist in re-
inventing the square wheel. But thou should take the greatest of care to
understand what thy libraries promise, and what they do not, lest thou rely on facilities
that may vanish from under thy feet in future.
Go To Top
8. Thou shalt make thy program1 5 purpose and structure clear to thy fellow man by using the One
True Brace Style, even if thou likest it not, for thy creativity is better used in solving problems than in
creating beautiful new impediments to understanding.
These words, alas, have caused some uncertainty among the novices and the
converts, who knoweth not the ancient wisdoms. The One True Brace Style
referred to is that demonstrated in the writings of the First Prophets, Kernighan
and Ritchie. Often and again it is criticized by the ignorant as hard to use, when in
truth it is merely somewhat difficult to learn, and thereafter is wonderfully clear
and obvious, if perhaps a bit sensitive to mistakes.
While thou might think that thine own ideas of brace style lead to clearer
programs, thy successors will not thank thee for it, but rather shall revile thy works
and curse thy name, and word of this might get to thy next employer. Many customs in
this life persist because they ease friction and promote productivity as a result of
universal agreement, and whether they are precisely the optimal choices is much less
important. So it is with brace style.
As a lamentable side issue, there has been some unrest from the fanatics of the
Pronoun Gestapo over the use of the word It man in this Commandment, for they
believe that great efforts and loud shouting devoted to the ritual purification of the
language will somehow redound to the benefit of the downtrodden (whose real and
grievous woes tendeth to get lost amidst all that thunder and fury). When preaching the
gospel to the narrow of mind and short of temper, the word "creature' may be
substituted as a suitable pseudoBiblical term free of the taint of Political
Incorrectness.
Go To Top
9.Thy external identifiers shall be unique in the first six characters, though this harsh discipline be irksome and the years of its necessity stretch before thee seemingly without end, lest thou tear thy hair out and go mad on that fateful day when thou desirest to make thy program run on an old system.
Though some hasty zealots cry "not so; the Millenium is come, and this saying is
obsolete and no longer need be supported ", verily there be many, many ancient
systems in the world, and it is the decree of the dreaded god Murphy that thy next
employment just might be on one. While thou sleepest, he plotteth against thee.
Awake and take care.
It is, note carefully, not necessary that thy identifiers be limited to a length of six
characters. The only requirement that the holy words place upon thee is uniqueness
within the first six. This often is not so hard as the belittlers claimeth.
Go To Top
10. Thou shalt foreswear, renounce, and abjure the vile heresy which claimeth that '~All the world l~ a VAX Y?, and have no commerce with the benighted heathens who cling to this barbarous belief, that the days of thy program may be long even though the days of thy current machine be short.
This particular heresy bids fair to be replaced by "All the world's a Sun" or
"All the world's a 386" (this latter being a particularly revolting invention of Satan),
but the words apply to all such without limitation. Beware, in particular, of the
subtle and terrible "All the world's a 32-bit machine", which is almost true today but
shall cease to be so before thy resume grows too much longer.
Go To Top
Non-Frames Index