I'm currently working with the Diab 4.4 C++ compiler. It's a total POS, non ANSI-compliant, and I've found problems with it in the past.
I'm wondering if the following problem is an issue with the compiler, or a shortcoming in my knowledge of C++
I realize that the form of x = x && y; will short-circuit the y part if x is false. What the compiler is doing is short-circuiting in the case of x = x && y(); where y() is a non-const function.
class A
{
int _a;
A(int a) { _a = a; }
bool someFunction() { _a = 0; return true; }
};
main(...)
{
A obj = A(1);
bool retval = false;
retval = retval && A.someFunction();
/* What is the value of A._a here? */
}
What seems wrong to me is the fact that the compiler is doing this short-circuiting even though someFunction() is not a const function. If it's not const, is the compiler overstepping its bounds by skipping A.someFunction() when retval is false?
Also, I realize this issue can be avoided by writing retval = A.someFunction() && retval; but I'd really like to know why this is happening.