A colleague of mine recently got bitten badly by writing out of bounds to a static array on the stack (he added an element to it without increasing the array size). Shouldn't the compiler catch this kind of error? The following code compiles cleanly with gcc, even with the -Wall -Wextra
options, and yet it is clearly erroneous:
int main(void)
{
int a[10];
a[13] = 3; // oops, overwrote the return address
return 0;
}
I'm positive that this is undefined behavior, although I can't find an excerpt from the C99 standard saying so at the moment. But in the simplest case, where the size of an array is known as compile time and the indices are known at compile time, shouldn't the compiler emit a warning at the very least?
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