I’m working through the vulkan tutorial and came across GLFW_TRUE and GLFW_FALSE. I presume there’s a good reason but in looking at the docs it’s just defining 1 and 0, so I’m sorta at a loss as to why some libraries do this (especially in cpp?).
Tangentially related is having things like vk_result which is a struct that stores an enum full of integer codes.
Wouldn’t it be easier to replace these variables with raw int codes or in the case of GLFW just 1 and 0?
Coming mostly from C, and having my caps lock bound to escape for vim, the amount of all caps variables is arduous for my admittedly short fingers.
Anyway hopefully one of you knows why libraries do this thanks!
I imagine this would still lead to a never ending stream of subtle logic errors.
from bossland import billysbool, billysand from geography import latlong import telephony def send_missile_alert(missiles_incoming: billysbool, is_drill: billysbool, target: latlong): if billysand(missiles_incoming, not is_drill): for phone in telephony.get_all_residents(target): phone.send_alert("Missiles are inbound to your location")
Can you spot the bug?
The conventional ‘not’ would not behave differently for the two non-zero values. Insidious.
Correct! I made a number of other mistakes (edited away now due to shame), but that’s the one I made on purpose.
I mean, if you have a billysbool class anyway, you’d make its truthiness correct according to bossman’s scheme, and then the not operator would work correctly.