Meme transcription:

Panel 1: Bilbo Baggins ponders, “After all… why should I care about the difference between int and String?

Panel 2: Bilbo Baggins is revealed to be an API developer. He continues, “JSON is always String, anyways…”

  • @[email protected]
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    5 months ago

    Well, you’re right. I wasn’t getting it, but I’ve also never seen any piece of software that would treat a single leading zero as octal. That’s just a recipe for disaster, and it should use 0o116 to be unambiguous

    (I am a software engineer, but was assuming you meant it was hardcoded to parse as octal, not some weird auto-detect)

      • @[email protected]
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        5 months ago

        Interesting that strtol in C does that. I’ve always explicitly passed in base 10 or 16, but I didn’t know it would auto-detect if you passed 0. TIL.

    • Doc Avid Mornington
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      25 months ago

      It’s been a long time, but I’m pretty sure C treats a leading zero as octal in source code. PHP and Node definitely do. Yes, it’s a bad convention. It’s much worse if that’s being done by a runtime function that parses user input, though. I’m pretty sure I’ve seen that somewhere in the past, but no idea where. Doesn’t seem likely to be common.

      • @[email protected]OP
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        25 months ago

        PHP and Node definitely do.

        Node doesn’t.

        > parseInt('077')
        77
        
        1. If the input string, with leading whitespace and possible +/- signs removed, begins with 0x or 0X (a zero, followed by lowercase or uppercase X), radix is assumed to be 16 and the rest of the string is parsed as a hexadecimal number.
        2. If the input string begins with any other value, the radix is 10 (decimal).

        https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/parseInt

        • Doc Avid Mornington
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          25 months ago

          You seem to have missed the important phrase “in source code”, as well as the entire second part of my comment discussing that runtime functions that parse user input are different.

          • @[email protected]OP
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            14 months ago

            You seem to have missed the important phrase “in source code”

            I read that, but I thought it was a useless qualifier, because everything is source code. You probably meant “in a literal”.