I have been doing some testing of my application by compiling it on different platforms, and the shift from a 64-bit system to a 32-bit system is exposing a number of issues.
I make heavy use of vectors, strings, etc., and as such need to count them. However, my functions also make use of 32-bit unsigned numbers because in many cases I need to explicitly consume a positive integer.
I'm having issues with seemingly simple tasks such as std::min
and std::max
, which may be more systemic. Consider the following code:
uint32_t getmax()
{
return _vecContainer.size();
}
Seems simple enough: I know that a vector can't have a negative number of elements, so returning an unsigned integer makes complete sense.
void setRowCol(const uint32_t &r_row; const uint32_t &r_col)
{
myContainer_t mc;
mc.row = r_row;
mc.col = r_col;
_vecContainer.push_back(mc);
}
Again, simple enough.
Problem:
uint32_t foo(const uint32_t &r_row)
{
return std::min(r_row, _vecContainer.size());
}
This gives me errors such as:
/Applications/Xcode.app/Contents/Developer/Toolchains/XcodeDefault.xctoolchain/usr/bin/../include/c++/v1/algorithm:2589:1: note: candidate template ignored: deduced conflicting types for parameter '_Tp' ('unsigned long' vs. 'unsigned int')
min(const _Tp& __a, const _Tp& __b)
I did a lot of digging, and on one platform vector::size_type is an 8 byte number. However, by design I am using unsigned 4-byte numbers. This is presumably causing things to be wacky because you cannot implicitly convert from an 8-byte number to a 4-byte number.
The solution was to do this the old fashioned weay:
#define MIN_M(a,b) a < b ? a : b
return MIN_M(r_row, _vecContainer.size());
Which works dandy. But the systemic issue remains: when planning for multiple platform support, how do you handle instances like this? I could use size_t as my standard size, but that adds other complications (e.g. moving from one platform which supports 64 bit numbers to another which supports 32 bit numbers at a later date). The bigger issue is that size_t is unsigned, so I can't update my signatures:
size_t foo(const size_t &r_row)
// bad, this allows -1 to be passed, which I don't want
Any suggestions?
EDIT: I had read somewhere that size_t was signed, and I've since been corrected. So far it looks like this is a limitation of my own design (e.g. 32-bit numbers vs. using std::vector::size_type and/or size_t).
std::vector
reference you will see thatsize_type
is usually astd::size_t
whose type is an implementation specific unsigned integer. If you want a type that denotes a non-negative size, you should either usestd::size_t
or for a containersize_type
itself.std::min(r_row, _vecContainer.size());
You can either make r_row the correct type for comparison, or explicitly cast it to the correct type.int
. See stackoverflow.com/a/10168569/3313064int
isn’t the right answer. Even on 64-bit systems,int
is often 32 bits. If you’re dealing withchar
s, then you really can have more than 2^31 - 1 of them, in memory, and this will cause problems.