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On 12/06/2024 23:29, Michael S wrote:On Wed, 12 Jun 2024 15:46:44 +0200
David Brown <david.brown@hesbynett.no> wrote:
>
I also don't imagine that string literals would be much faster for
compilation, at least for file sizes that I think make sense.
Just shows how little do you know about internals of typical
compiler. Which, by itself, is o.k. What is not o.k. is that with
your level of knowledge you have a nerve to argue vs bart that
obviously knows a lot more.
I know more than most C programmers about how certain C compilers
work, and what works well with them, and what is relevant for them -
though I certainly don't claim to know everything. Obviously Bart
knows vastly more about how /his/ compiler works. He also tends to
do testing with several small and odd C compilers, which can give
interesting results even though they are of little practical
relevance for real-world C development work.
>
Testing a 1 MB file of random data, gcc -O2 took less than a second
to compile it.
One megabyte is about the biggest size I would think
makes sense to embed directly in C code unless you are doing
something very niche - usually if you need that much data, you'd be
better off with separate files and standardised packaging systems
like zip files, installer setup.exe builds, or that kind of thing.
Using string literals, the compile time was shorter, but when you are
already below a second, it's all just irrelevant noise.
For much bigger files, string literals are likely to be faster for
compilation for gcc because the compiler does not track as much
information
(for use in diagnostic messages).
But it makes no
difference to real world development.
And I
have heard (it could be wrong) that MSVC has severe limits on the
size of string literals, though it is not a compiler I ever use
myself.
Citation, please..
<https://letmegooglethat.com/?q=msvc+string+literal+length+limit>
Actually, I think it was from Bart that I first heard that MSVC has
limitations on its string literal lengths, but I could well be
misremembering that. I am confident, however, that it was here in
c.l.c., as MSVC is not a tool I have used myself.
<https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/cpp/cpp/string-and-character-literals-cpp>
It seems that version 17.0 has removed the arbitrary limits, while
before that it was limited to 65K in their C++ compiler.
For the MSVC C compiler, I see this:
<https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/cpp/c-language/maximum-string-length>
Each individual string is up to 2048 bytes, which can be concatenated
to a maximum of 65K in total.
I see other links giving different values, but I expect the MS ones
to be authoritative. It is possible that newer versions of their C
compiler have removed the limit, just as for their C++ compiler, but
it was missing from that webpage.
(And I noticed also someone saying that MSVC is 70x faster at using
string literals compared to lists of integers for array
initialisation.)
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