Sender: crough45 AT amc DOT de Message-Id: <97Oct9.185357gmt+0100.11651@internet01.amc.de> Date: Thu, 9 Oct 1997 17:58:25 +0100 From: Chris Croughton Mime-Version: 1.0 To: beroset AT mindspring DOT com Cc: djgpp AT delorie DOT com Subject: Re: ccoding empty loops Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Precedence: bulk Ed Beroset wrote: > > - and in fact violates the coding standards of the last > > three places I worked at. 8-) > > How very odd. Do those coding standards state something like, "all > while statements shall have curly braces" or do they have some specific > prohibition against the "continue" keyword? Not at all odd. Most coding standards I've seen insist on braces on all controlled statements - if, while, do, for, etc. Particularly when developing code it avoids problems when inserting statements. For instance: Original code: if (x < y) x = y; Then you realise you want to do something as well. It's very easy to end up with something like: if (x < y) x = y; a[x] = y*y; and not notice that the second statement isn't actually controlled by the if. It's even worse if you're used to seeing K&R type braces like if (x < y) { x = y; a[x] = y*y; } It also minimises the risk of doing something else wrong while editing - you can delete a statement without having to delete the braces as well (and seveal times I've deleted one line too many). (Auto-indenters don't help when it's C++ instead of C, they break. Unless the GNU people have upgraded indent recently, but from what I heard they weren't interested because the 'official' language of GNU is C.) Chris C