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"I watched C-pointers glitter in the dark near Tannhäuser Gate…"
It's a three by three array in C, how hard could it be to have a function to loop over that array and show what's in the grid?
#include <stdio.h> void show(int **gp, size_t rows, size_t cols) { for (size_t r = 0; r < rows; ++r) { for (size_t c = 0; c < cols; ++c) printf("%d", gp[r][c]); putchar('\n'); } } int main(int argc, char *argv[]) { int grid[3][3] = { {1, 2, 3}, {4, 5, 6}, {7, 8, 9} }; show((int **)grid, 3, 3); }
$ make threeby && ./threeby cc -O2 -pipe -o threeby threeby.c Segmentation fault (core dumped)
Time may be spent in a debugger or doing printf of "%p" on "(void *)gp" and such, the gist of which is that the memory addresses are totally wrong in the "show" function, and bad memory access results in process death. Or you could read various documentation and conclude that while there are various solutions,
void show(int *gp, size_t rows, size_t cols) { for (size_t r = 0; r < rows; ++r) { for (size_t c = 0; c < cols; ++c) { //printf("%d", *(gp + (r * cols) + c)); printf("%d", (gp + r * cols)[c]); } putchar('\n'); } }
you might be better off allocating a NxM matrix and passing that around rather than to try to make a fixed allocation work with a function that the compiler has no idea what the array dimensions are.
How does this work in other languages? There may be extra metadata so that you can query the size of the array, not loop over invalid memory addresses, and other such important details. Often this comes with overhead.
$ perl -MDevel::Peek -e '@x = 57..99; Dump \@x' SV = IV(0xfa58e60b7f8) at 0xfa58e60b808 REFCNT = 1 FLAGS = (TEMP,ROK) RV = 0xfa585c32a48 SV = PVAV(0xfa6226950d8) at 0xfa585c32a48 REFCNT = 2 FLAGS = () ARRAY = 0xfa585c2b180 FILL = 42 MAX = 42 FLAGS = (REAL) Elt No. 0 SV = IV(0xfa62269e648) at 0xfa62269e658 REFCNT = 1 FLAGS = (IOK,pIOK) IV = 57 ...
Random array dimensions? Can do!
(block nil (setq *random-state* (make-random-state t)) (return)) (defun some-random-numbers () (loop repeat (+ 3 (random 5)) collect (1+ (random 7)))) (defun random-array () (make-array (some-random-numbers))) (loop repeat 4 do (format t "~&~a~&" (array-dimensions (random-array))))
"Understanding and Using C Pointers". Richard M Reese. 2013.
Ideally you brush up on these details before getting into a time limited programming challenge, but you may not know what you're weak on until you get into a time limited programming challenge.