Reverse engineering code and I'm kind of appalled at the style, but I wanted to make sure there's no good reason for doing these things....
Is it just me or is this a horrible coding style
if ( pwbuf ) sprintf(username,"%s",pwbuf->pw_name);
else sprintf(username,"%d",user_id);
And why wrap code not intended for compilation in an
#if 0
....
#endif
Instead of comments?
EDIT: So as some explained below, this is due to the possibility to flummox /* */ which I didn't realize.
But I still don't understand, why not just use your programming environment tools or favorite text editor's macro's to block comment it out using "//"
wouldn't this be MUCH more straightforward and easy to know to visually skip?
Am I just inexperienced in C and missing why these things might be a good idea -- or is there no excuse, and I'm justified in feeling irritated at how ugly this code is?
#if 0) dates back to the early days. We used terminals with a limited number of total characters, no graphics, no windows, and only one text color because the CRT had only one phosphor. Editors capable enough to do block comment out intelligently were real scarce. – RBerteig Sep 3 '10 at 0:08