• Lunya \ she/it
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    617 months ago

    Meanwhile Rust: you might get an error at line 45 word 3 because it assumes variable foo is an int32 but it could be (whatever else idk), let’s not compile this before you correct this by changing line 43 in this specific way. Here’s the before and after code snippets so you can just copy-paste the fix.

    • TxzK
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      367 months ago

      Man I fucking love the Rust compiler. Easily the most understandable and useful error messages I’ve ever seen.

    • @[email protected]
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      187 months ago

      In my IDE there us even a button for accepting the compilers recommend fix. This is only possible because the error messages and recommendations are that good.

  • @[email protected]
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    407 months ago

    JavaScript: error: undefined is undefined or some nonsense like that. Sorry to repeat the old JavaScript bad, but I really hate debugging JavaScript!

  • @Tja
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    317 months ago

    Someone needs to be introduced to gdb…

    • @parens
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      07 months ago

      have fun without those debug symbols

      • @Tja
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        107 months ago

        Why wouldn’t I have debug symbols in the software I’m developing?

        • @parens
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          07 months ago

          And what happens when you release it?

          • @Tja
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            57 months ago

            If you want the same traces as Java and python in the meme, you leave them, if you don’t you strip them. Or you ship them separately. You decide, like a big boy.

          • @[email protected]
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            16 months ago

            Have the user compile it without debug symbols to save space. If the user has a problem they can just recompile it with debug symbols and see what went wrong with gdb.

  • @[email protected]
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    167 months ago

    It’s been a minute since I used C/Cpp but if you compile with debugging symbols and using gdb give you info like in Java? At least the location of the crash.

      • @[email protected]
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        87 months ago

        Then it’s time to have a closer look at how your concurrent threads are behaving and where you missed a sync point or mutex.

      • @mrkite
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        47 months ago

        That’s when you break out valgrind because you certainly are using uninitialized memory.

    • @[email protected]
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      26 months ago

      And much more, it tells you each operation it goes through, where it is in the code, what’s in the registers and more.

  • Illecors
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    157 months ago

    But it returned 139! That’s a start even without a debugger!

  • @[email protected]
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    107 months ago

    And C/C++ are like that by design. Compiled languages were new and the developers were afraid additional checks would decrease performance. It was certainly performant in racing toward a crash.

    • mox
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      57 months ago

      And C/C++ are like that by design. Compiled languages were new and the developers were afraid additional checks would decrease performance.

      If you have a credible citation showing that was what guided K&R’s decisions, I think you should post it.

  • Gnome Kat
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    77 months ago

    but with a core dump you can just load it up and see the state of the process when it crashed…

    • @mrkite
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      37 months ago

      I’m trying to remember the last time I actually had a core file. I think core dumps have been disabled by default on Linux since at least 2000.

      • @Tja
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        27 months ago

        They are stored in the system log and thus rotated automatically to save storage. At least in Arch.

        I use Arch, BTW.

  • @[email protected]
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    47 months ago

    Story time. Back at uni I had a c++ subject. Me being lazy as fuck I didn’t attend many classes and let alone do the practicals during the semester. Exam time comes around. I realise I can’t cram in a whole semester’s learning in a week. Luckily it’s open book exam. Big brain time, I print the whole c++ documentation to take into the exam. I frantically page through the hundreds of pages in my lever arch file looking for answers. I pretty much copy and write example code to questions. Very sad when I failed.

  • @[email protected]
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    27 months ago
    gdb> break before it crashes
    gdb> record full
    gdb> continue
    (segfault)
    

    gdb> set exec-direction reverse

  • @[email protected]
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    16 months ago

    The code editor I had to use for Java once didn’t give me anything like that.

    Meanwhile for C you can just use gdb, it’s great!