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On Thu, Aug 4, 2011 at 14:23, Norman Ramsey <nr@cs.tufts.edu> wrote:
>  > > What are your thoughts about using int64?  Not ANSI?  Not performant?
>  >
>  > Both. Moreover, it does not solve all cases. For instance, fseek is
>  > limited to long in C.
>
> Ouch!  OK, thanks for the clarification.
>
>  > As pointed out in the case of fseek, the big problem is the interface
>  > with C. And documenting everything would be messy; the limits are not
>  > even the same for every function (e.g., int x long x size_t).
>
> Agreed.
>
>  > Although it was me who came with the "widespread" argument, I guess it
>  > is not that widespread in pragmatic terms. As Dirk pointed out, it is
>  > rare (or impossible, in Lua) to have too large structures, so in real
>  > programs seldom (or never) a real index will be larger than 2^31 or
>  > whatever the limit. It may be more useful to collect real scenarios
>  > where this problem actually happens (e.g., format, which applies to
>  > generic numbers, not only indices or sizes) and try to solve them
>  > (e.g., with error messages).
>
> I like the sound of this plan.  Part of it is that Lua is intended as
> a safe language.  And at many of these boundaries, the cost of error
> checking is going to be small compared with the cost of an operation
> like sprintf() or fseek().   I'm hoping that the relevant tests might
> look like this:
>
>  if ((LUA_NUMBER)(int) n != n)
>    lua_error(L, "numeric overflow in string.format(... %d ...)");
>
> or
>
>  if ((LUA_NUMBER)(long) n != n)
>    lua_error(L, "numeric overflow in file:fseek(...)");
>
> On modern hardware with good branch prediction these tests will have
> good instruction-level parallelism, plus the cost of the test is small
> compared with the cost of the operation the test protects.  And the
> test is likely to be done entirely in the floating-point unit.
>
> I would be totally happy with a failure mode that calls error()
> instead of silently using only the least significant N bits.
>
>
> Norman
>
>
>

I wonder why Lua can't use fseek64 and the like?

-- 
Sent from my toaster.