Fragen? Antworten! Siehe auch: Alternativlos
spray the apps directory with anti-VMS napalm. so that its lovecraftian horror is not forever lost, i reproduce below a comment from the deleted code. /* 2011-03-22 SMS. * If we have 32-bit pointers everywhere, then we're safe, and * we bypass this mess, as on non-VMS systems. (See ARGV, * above.) * Problem 1: Compaq/HP C before V7.3 always used 32-bit * pointers for argv[]. * Fix 1: For a 32-bit argv[], when we're using 64-bit pointers * everywhere else, we always allocate and use a 64-bit * duplicate of argv[]. * Problem 2: Compaq/HP C V7.3 (Alpha, IA64) before ECO1 failed * to NULL-terminate a 64-bit argv[]. (As this was written, the * compiler ECO was available only on IA64.) * Fix 2: Unless advised not to (VMS_TRUST_ARGV), we test a * 64-bit argv[argc] for NULL, and, if necessary, use a * (properly) NULL-terminated (64-bit) duplicate of argv[]. * The same code is used in either case to duplicate argv[]. * Some of these decisions could be handled in preprocessing, * but the code tends to get even uglier, and the penalty for * deciding at compile- or run-time is tiny. */Da ist man auch als Atheist versucht, nach dem Weihwasser zu greifen.