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Recurring C++ and Qt anti-patterns

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  • Chris KawaC Offline
    Chris KawaC Offline
    Chris Kawa
    Lifetime Qt Champion
    wrote on last edited by
    #48

    Being an a-hole as a recruiter:

    What does o() mean?
    What does o.o mean?
    What does o->o mean?
    What does o-->o mean?
    What does o()--<=>--o() mean? Fun fact - crashes MSVC (yes, the compiler, not the compiled program)
    What does [](){;o()++<=>++o();}() mean?

    J.HilkJ 1 Reply Last reply
    3
    • Chris KawaC Chris Kawa

      I had to dig through this thing once, only the real code was like a hundred times longer and more convoluted.

      // Library.h statically linked to and included in DLL and EXE
      struct SomeType
      {
         int typeId();
      };
      Q_DECLARE_METATYPE(SomeType);
      
      // Library.cpp
      int SomeType::typeId()
      {
          return qMetaTypeId<SomeType>();
      }
      
      // main app
      SomeType& var1 = getItFromDLL();
      SomeType& var2 = getItFromEXE();
      
      bool same = var1.typeId() == var2.typeId(); // nope
      

      Pretty ugly thing to debug, especially since once in blue moon it actually works :/

      kshegunovK Offline
      kshegunovK Offline
      kshegunov
      Moderators
      wrote on last edited by
      #49

      @chris-kawa said in Recurring C++ and Qt anti-patterns:

      I had to dig through this thing once, only the real code was like a hundred times longer and more convoluted.
      [Snip]
      Pretty ugly thing to debug, especially since once in blue moon it actually works :/

      Indeed. Although, this is windows specific. It works correctly on Linux as the symbol resolution happens at run time.

      Read and abide by the Qt Code of Conduct

      1 Reply Last reply
      1
      • Chris KawaC Chris Kawa

        Being an a-hole as a recruiter:

        What does o() mean?
        What does o.o mean?
        What does o->o mean?
        What does o-->o mean?
        What does o()--<=>--o() mean? Fun fact - crashes MSVC (yes, the compiler, not the compiled program)
        What does [](){;o()++<=>++o();}() mean?

        J.HilkJ Online
        J.HilkJ Online
        J.Hilk
        Moderators
        wrote on last edited by
        #50

        @chris-kawa wow, some of those you don't encounter every day...


        Be aware of the Qt Code of Conduct, when posting : https://forum.qt.io/topic/113070/qt-code-of-conduct


        Q: What's that?
        A: It's blue light.
        Q: What does it do?
        A: It turns blue.

        1 Reply Last reply
        0
        • Chris KawaC Offline
          Chris KawaC Offline
          Chris Kawa
          Lifetime Qt Champion
          wrote on last edited by Chris Kawa
          #51

          Yeah, it was a bit out of topic. Here's one anti-pattern I encounter something like 9/10 code reviews:

          auto widget = new SomeWidget(some_widget);
          auto layout = new SomeLayout(some_other_widget);
          layout->addWidget(widget);
          

          It's not a correctness bug. It's a subtle performance one. Compare this with:

          auto widget = new SomeWidget();
          auto layout = new SomeLayout();
          layout->addWidget(widget);
          some_other_widget->setLayout(layout);
          

          If you don't see it - count how many times parents need to be changed and imagine there's not one but, say, 50 widgets and layouts.
          For extra sweetness do the same when the parent widget is visible - how many times layouts need to be recalculated?

          jsulmJ 1 Reply Last reply
          6
          • Chris KawaC Chris Kawa

            Yeah, it was a bit out of topic. Here's one anti-pattern I encounter something like 9/10 code reviews:

            auto widget = new SomeWidget(some_widget);
            auto layout = new SomeLayout(some_other_widget);
            layout->addWidget(widget);
            

            It's not a correctness bug. It's a subtle performance one. Compare this with:

            auto widget = new SomeWidget();
            auto layout = new SomeLayout();
            layout->addWidget(widget);
            some_other_widget->setLayout(layout);
            

            If you don't see it - count how many times parents need to be changed and imagine there's not one but, say, 50 widgets and layouts.
            For extra sweetness do the same when the parent widget is visible - how many times layouts need to be recalculated?

            jsulmJ Online
            jsulmJ Online
            jsulm
            Lifetime Qt Champion
            wrote on last edited by
            #52

            @chris-kawa said in Recurring C++ and Qt anti-patterns:

            auto widget = new SomeWidget(widget);

            I hope this is a typo :-)

            https://forum.qt.io/topic/113070/qt-code-of-conduct

            Chris KawaC 1 Reply Last reply
            1
            • jsulmJ jsulm

              @chris-kawa said in Recurring C++ and Qt anti-patterns:

              auto widget = new SomeWidget(widget);

              I hope this is a typo :-)

              Chris KawaC Offline
              Chris KawaC Offline
              Chris Kawa
              Lifetime Qt Champion
              wrote on last edited by
              #53

              @jsulm Sure, sorry, fixed :)

              1 Reply Last reply
              0
              • Kent-DorfmanK Offline
                Kent-DorfmanK Offline
                Kent-Dorfman
                wrote on last edited by
                #54

                @chris-kawa said in Recurring C++ and Qt anti-patterns:

                It's not a correctness bug. It's a subtle performance one. Compare this with:

                It took me a few minutes but ok, I'm convinced... LOL

                1 Reply Last reply
                0
                • fcarneyF Offline
                  fcarneyF Offline
                  fcarney
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #55
                  mtime.toString(tr("M/d/yyyy hh:mm AP"));
                  

                  C++ is a perfectly valid school of magic.

                  aha_1980A 1 Reply Last reply
                  2
                  • fcarneyF fcarney
                    mtime.toString(tr("M/d/yyyy hh:mm AP"));
                    
                    aha_1980A Offline
                    aha_1980A Offline
                    aha_1980
                    Lifetime Qt Champion
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #56

                    Hi @fcarney,

                    mtime.toString(tr("M/d/yyyy hh:mm AP"));

                    OMG. Yeah, that's a good (bad) one :)

                    Qt has to stay free or it will die.

                    1 Reply Last reply
                    0
                    • fcarneyF Offline
                      fcarneyF Offline
                      fcarney
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #57

                      Just created this pattern today:

                      if(condition == somevalue)
                      somestatement.append(whatever);
                      

                      I forgot the indentation so it didn't look like and if statement.
                      I I know this is really simple and not an error/bad practice. It is more a readability issue.

                      Going to be more rigorous in the future:

                      if(condition == somevalue){
                          somestatement.append(whatever);
                      }
                      

                      C++ is a perfectly valid school of magic.

                      1 Reply Last reply
                      2
                      • SGaistS Offline
                        SGaistS Offline
                        SGaist
                        Lifetime Qt Champion
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #58

                        Well, that one made a big security hole in Apple's authentication code but it was the other way around, several lines under the if without curly brackets.

                        Interested in AI ? www.idiap.ch
                        Please read the Qt Code of Conduct - https://forum.qt.io/topic/113070/qt-code-of-conduct

                        aha_1980A 1 Reply Last reply
                        3
                        • fcarneyF Offline
                          fcarneyF Offline
                          fcarney
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #59

                          Wow, okay, I take it back. Bad pattern!

                          C++ is a perfectly valid school of magic.

                          1 Reply Last reply
                          0
                          • SGaistS SGaist

                            Well, that one made a big security hole in Apple's authentication code but it was the other way around, several lines under the if without curly brackets.

                            aha_1980A Offline
                            aha_1980A Offline
                            aha_1980
                            Lifetime Qt Champion
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #60

                            @SGaist I've seen GCC 7.3 warning about exactly this problem ("thif if clause ... does not guard ...").

                            So hopefully such problems will go away sooner than later.

                            Regards

                            Qt has to stay free or it will die.

                            kshegunovK 1 Reply Last reply
                            0
                            • aha_1980A aha_1980

                              @SGaist I've seen GCC 7.3 warning about exactly this problem ("thif if clause ... does not guard ...").

                              So hopefully such problems will go away sooner than later.

                              Regards

                              kshegunovK Offline
                              kshegunovK Offline
                              kshegunov
                              Moderators
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #61

                              Nope. It warns if it doesn't actually guard (as if you had put incidentally ; at the end of the if):

                              if (something)
                              something else;
                              something else else; //< Can't warn about that
                              

                              Read and abide by the Qt Code of Conduct

                              aha_1980A 1 Reply Last reply
                              0
                              • aha_1980A Offline
                                aha_1980A Offline
                                aha_1980
                                Lifetime Qt Champion
                                wrote on last edited by aha_1980
                                #62

                                OMG

                                QString CharToString(char *str)
                                {
                                    QString result = "";
                                    int lengthOfString = strlen(str);
                                
                                    QString s;
                                    for(int i = 0; i < lengthOfString; i++)
                                    {
                                        s = QString("%1").arg(str[i], 0, 16);
                                
                                        if(s.length() == 1)
                                            result.append("0");
                                
                                        result.append(s);
                                    }
                                
                                    return result;
                                }
                                

                                There are multiple anti-patterns in that function (who finds all?!), but basically the solution is to use: QString s = QByteArray::toHex(str);

                                Qt has to stay free or it will die.

                                1 Reply Last reply
                                2
                                • kshegunovK kshegunov

                                  Nope. It warns if it doesn't actually guard (as if you had put incidentally ; at the end of the if):

                                  if (something)
                                  something else;
                                  something else else; //< Can't warn about that
                                  
                                  aha_1980A Offline
                                  aha_1980A Offline
                                  aha_1980
                                  Lifetime Qt Champion
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #63

                                  @kshegunov

                                  What I meant was the following example:

                                  8ac16113-6178-40b1-9ce0-232de08d5cb6-image.png

                                  which is already an improvement on poorly formatted code.

                                  Regards

                                  Qt has to stay free or it will die.

                                  1 Reply Last reply
                                  2
                                  • fcarneyF Offline
                                    fcarneyF Offline
                                    fcarney
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #64

                                    Including the wrong header that doesn't match cpp file definition... This is really confusing.

                                    C++ is a perfectly valid school of magic.

                                    1 Reply Last reply
                                    0
                                    • fcarneyF Offline
                                      fcarneyF Offline
                                      fcarney
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #65

                                      Hmmm... I have just found some icky syntax that makes me think it is an anti-pattern just cause its icky:

                                      #include <vector>
                                      
                                      template <class T>
                                      class IteratorClass
                                      {
                                      public:
                                          std::vector<int>::iterator end(); // neat syntax
                                          std::vector<T>::iterator end2(); // error, needs typename
                                          typename std::vector<T>::iterator begin(); // really? this is getting ugly
                                          using retIterator = typename std::vector<T>::iterator; // ugly
                                          typedef typename std::vector<T>::iterator retIterator; // fugly
                                      
                                      private:
                                          std::vector<T> m_data;
                                      };
                                      

                                      Got stuck on this last night and just couldn't figure out why the simplest syntax would not work with templates. My IDE even told me I needed "typename" and I kept trying "typedef" (💩). Yeah, it was not a good time to be coding, so I went to bed. 😀

                                      C++ is a perfectly valid school of magic.

                                      1 Reply Last reply
                                      0
                                      • Kent-DorfmanK Offline
                                        Kent-DorfmanK Offline
                                        Kent-Dorfman
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #66

                                        @fcarney said in Recurring C++ and Qt anti-patterns:

                                        std::vector<T>::iterator end2(); // error, needs typename

                                        Yeah, this being an error (inside a template definition) really bugs me as well.

                                        I'm sure there is a perfectly good brainiac reason it barfs, but I could really see myself wanting to do something like this, as "end2" instead of end2()

                                        fcarneyF 1 Reply Last reply
                                        0
                                        • Kent-DorfmanK Kent-Dorfman

                                          @fcarney said in Recurring C++ and Qt anti-patterns:

                                          std::vector<T>::iterator end2(); // error, needs typename

                                          Yeah, this being an error (inside a template definition) really bugs me as well.

                                          I'm sure there is a perfectly good brainiac reason it barfs, but I could really see myself wanting to do something like this, as "end2" instead of end2()

                                          fcarneyF Offline
                                          fcarneyF Offline
                                          fcarney
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #67

                                          @Kent-Dorfman
                                          Apparently its a "dependent name":
                                          https://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/language/dependent_name

                                          I have not taken time to understand it, but there is the "reason".

                                          C++ is a perfectly valid school of magic.

                                          1 Reply Last reply
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