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Special Case

Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved The Weird and The Wonderful
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  • A ASkoro

    Hey but what about i being sqrt(2)???

    Y Offline
    Y Offline
    YvesDaoust
    wrote on last edited by
    #20

    Function will return sqrt(2) + 1

    A 1 Reply Last reply
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    • Y YvesDaoust

      Function will return sqrt(2) + 1

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      ASkoro
      wrote on last edited by
      #21

      And for sqrt(-2)????

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      • A ASkoro

        And for sqrt(-2)????

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        Y Offline
        YvesDaoust
        wrote on last edited by
        #22

        SquareRootException + 1

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        • R Rotted Frog

          Just a quick one, but amused me when I saw it in code today.

          if (i == 0)
          return 1;
          else
          return i + 1;

          L Offline
          L Offline
          Lost User
          wrote on last edited by
          #23

          For the sake of learning here, why do some of the examples use the abs function in their answers. Why not just i++?

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          • L Lost User

            For the sake of learning here, why do some of the examples use the abs function in their answers. Why not just i++?

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            thoiness
            wrote on last edited by
            #24

            Rewritten:

            return (i == 0) ? 1 : i++;

            In division, specifically in the denominator, this code eliminates the divide by zero issue. I think the OP (original programmer) had good intentions.

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            • L Lost User

              For the sake of learning here, why do some of the examples use the abs function in their answers. Why not just i++?

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              patbob
              wrote on last edited by
              #25

              Why not use i++? Obfuscation. The original coder was trying to obfuscate it by using an if statement, so people are running with that theme :)

              We can program with only 1's, but if all you've got are zeros, you've got nothing.

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              • A ASkoro

                And for sqrt(-2)????

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                Member 4608898
                wrote on last edited by
                #26

                And for sqrt(-1/64) do we get indigestion tablets?

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                • T thoiness

                  Rewritten:

                  return (i == 0) ? 1 : i++;

                  In division, specifically in the denominator, this code eliminates the divide by zero issue. I think the OP (original programmer) had good intentions.

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                  O Offline
                  Oscar0
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #27

                  Bug Alert. I think you meant perhaps: return (i == 0) ? 1 : ++i;

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                  • A ASkoro

                    And for sqrt(-2)????

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                    KP Lee
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #28

                    ASkoro wrote:

                    And for sqrt(-2)????

                    Computers ignore complexity. Or is that irrationality? I'm almost sure that's a complex number. If that is true, what is an irrational number? I know they both exist, but can't definitively define them.

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                    • S sergiogarcianinja

                      I just tried your method, and my compiler is generating a error about a method must return a value, so I fixed it. There is a version without bugs, hope it helps:

                      if (i < 0)
                      return 1 - abs(i);
                      else if (i == 0)
                      return 1;
                      else if (i > 0)
                      return 1 + abs(i);

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                      K Offline
                      KP Lee
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #29

                      Sorry, I fail to see how you fixed it. Computers aren't very good at determining there is an unreachable path. Put an unconditional return 1 - abs(i) + abs(i); after all the if statements should fix it. (Especially if i is uint. Checking for negative numbers is really interesting in that case.)

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                      • L Lost User

                        For the sake of learning here, why do some of the examples use the abs function in their answers. Why not just i++?

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                        K Offline
                        KP Lee
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #30

                        MehGerbil wrote:

                        Why not just i++?

                        For one thing that would be the same as returning i. (Unless the i was passed with ref. Then you get two values for the price of one.)

                        MehGerbil wrote:

                        For the sake of learning here

                        That's rich. Trying to learn better coding by studying poor code harder.

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                        • K KP Lee

                          MehGerbil wrote:

                          Why not just i++?

                          For one thing that would be the same as returning i. (Unless the i was passed with ref. Then you get two values for the price of one.)

                          MehGerbil wrote:

                          For the sake of learning here

                          That's rich. Trying to learn better coding by studying poor code harder.

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                          Lost User
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #31

                          The intent was to write: return i++;

                          KP Lee wrote:

                          That's rich. Trying to learn better coding by studying poor code harder.

                          I think fixing bad code is a great way to learn, especially if you learn the "why" along the way.

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                          • L Lost User

                            For the sake of learning here, why do some of the examples use the abs function in their answers. Why not just i++?

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                            B Offline
                            BobJanova
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #32

                            It should be 'return i + 1'. ++i is a wasteful update of the variable i, assuming it's local (there's some serious issues if it isn't anyway), and i++ is just wrong because it returns i (before the statement) and not i + 1.

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                            • B BobJanova

                              It should be 'return i + 1'. ++i is a wasteful update of the variable i, assuming it's local (there's some serious issues if it isn't anyway), and i++ is just wrong because it returns i (before the statement) and not i + 1.

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                              Lost User
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #33

                              That was interesting. Why is it that ++i is less efficient then returning i + 1? Isn't a calculation made (total of i + 1) made in memory somewhere regardless?

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                              • R Rotted Frog

                                Just a quick one, but amused me when I saw it in code today.

                                if (i == 0)
                                return 1;
                                else
                                return i + 1;

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                                V Offline
                                Vitaly Tomilov
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #34

                                I'm not surprised, see it all the time. This happens as a result of changing the condition, i.e. the code was written for one condition, then the condition changed, and the code was updated without logical refactoring. Also, some developers like making code temporarily unreachable rather than commenting it out, i.e. putting the code into a block like:

                                if(false){...code...}

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                                • R Rotted Frog

                                  Just a quick one, but amused me when I saw it in code today.

                                  if (i == 0)
                                  return 1;
                                  else
                                  return i + 1;

                                  A Offline
                                  A Offline
                                  Albert Holguin
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #35

                                  Developer took special math classes... :-D

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                                  0
                                  • L Lost User

                                    That was interesting. Why is it that ++i is less efficient then returning i + 1? Isn't a calculation made (total of i + 1) made in memory somewhere regardless?

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                                    R Offline
                                    Rotted Frog
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #36

                                    It's likely that compiler optimisations make it irrelevant in this case. But in the general case, she using ++i the value is copied into i after being calculated, then copied into the return variable. Using i+1 only copies it to the return variable (one less copy).

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                                    • R Rotted Frog

                                      It's likely that compiler optimisations make it irrelevant in this case. But in the general case, she using ++i the value is copied into i after being calculated, then copied into the return variable. Using i+1 only copies it to the return variable (one less copy).

                                      L Offline
                                      L Offline
                                      Lost User
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #37

                                      Interesting. Thank you for the informative response.

                                      1 Reply Last reply
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