I've been reading a lot those days about reinterpret_cast<>
and how on should use it (and avoid it on most cases).
While I understand that using reinterpret_cast<>
to cast from, say unsigned char*
to char*
is implementation defined (and thus non-portable) it seems to be no other way for efficiently convert one to the other.
Lets say I use a library that deals with unsigned char*
to process some computations. Internaly, I already use char*
to store my data (And I can't change it because it would kill puppies if I did).
I would have done something like:
char* mydata = getMyDataSomewhere();
size_t mydatalen = getMyDataLength();
// We use it here
// processData() takes a unsigned char*
void processData(reinterpret_cast<unsigned char*>(mydata), mydatalen);
// I could have done this:
void processData((unsigned char*)mydata, mydatalen);
// But it would have resulted in a similar call I guess ?
If I want my code to be highly portable, it seems I have no other choice than copying my data first. Something like:
char* mydata = getMyDataSomewhere();
size_t mydatalen = getMyDataLength();
unsigned char* mydata_copy = new unsigned char[mydatalen];
for (size_t i = 0; i < mydatalen; ++i)
mydata_copy[i] = static_cast<unsigned char>(mydata[i]);
void processData(mydata_copy, mydatalen);
Of course, that is highly suboptimal and I'm not even sure that it is more portable than the first solution.
So the question is, what would you do in this situation to have a highly-portable code ?