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docs: Soft-deprecate gsize in favour of standard size_t
We have chosen the underlying type that implements gsize to be the same size as the standard C89 size_t (the top-level meson.build sets this up). Unfortunately, we cannot guarantee that GLib and the C toolchain have chosen the *same* fixed-size type: for example, on a typical ILP32 platform like 32-bit Windows or Linux, each of gsize and size_t can either be int or long, while on a LP64 platform like 64-bit Linux, each could either be long or long long. meson.build tries to choose the same type to reduce compiler warnings, but it can only do this if the compiler implements `-Werror`. The in-memory representation is the same either way, but the choice of underlying type matters when building printf format strings or issuing compiler warnings, and can affect the C++ ABI of GLib-based software. As a result, we can't just typedef gsize as size_t. I've expanded the doc-comment to say a bit more about the implications of the different types here, so that I can point to it from the doc-comments of other types without repeating myself too much. Helps: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib/-/issues/1484 Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@collabora.com>
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@ -617,7 +617,11 @@
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* An unsigned integer type of the result of the `sizeof` operator,
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* corresponding to the `size_t` type defined in C99.
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*
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* It is usually 32 bit wide on a 32-bit platform and 64 bit wide
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* The standard `size_t` type should be preferred in new code, unless
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* consistency with pre-existing APIs requires `gsize`
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* (see below for more details).
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*
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* `gsize` is usually 32 bit wide on a 32-bit platform and 64 bit wide
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* on a 64-bit platform. Values of this type can range from 0 to
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* %G_MAXSIZE.
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*
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@ -632,6 +636,27 @@
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*
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* To print or scan values of this type, use
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* %G_GSIZE_MODIFIER and/or %G_GSIZE_FORMAT.
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*
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* Note that on platforms where more than one standard integer type is
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* the same size, `size_t` and `gsize` are always the same size but are
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* not necessarily implemented by the same standard integer type.
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* For example, on an ILP32 platform where `int`, `long` and pointers
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* are all 32-bit, `size_t` might be `unsigned long` while `gsize`
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* might be `unsigned int`.
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* This can result in compiler warnings or unexpected C++ name-mangling
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* if the two types are used inconsistently.
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*
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* As a result, changing a type from `gsize` to `size_t` in existing APIs
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* might be an incompatible API or ABI change, especially if C++
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* is involved. The safe option is to leave existing APIs using the same type
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* that they have historically used, and only use the standard C types in
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* new APIs.
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*
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* Similar considerations apply to all the fixed-size types
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* (#gint8, #guint8, #gint16, #guint16, #gint32, #guint32, #gint64,
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* #guint64 and #goffset), as well as #gintptr and #guintptr.
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* Types that are 32 bits or larger are particularly likely to be
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* affected by this.
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*/
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/**
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@ -639,6 +664,9 @@
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*
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* The maximum value which can be held in a #gsize.
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*
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* This is the same as standard C `SIZE_MAX` (available since C99),
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* which should be preferred in new code.
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*
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* Since: 2.4
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*/
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@ -649,6 +677,11 @@
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* for scanning and printing values of type #gsize. It
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* is a string literal.
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*
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* Note that this is not necessarily the correct modifier to scan or
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* print a `size_t`, even though the in-memory representation is the
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* same. The Standard C `"z"` modifier should be used for `size_t`,
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* assuming a C99-compliant `printf` implementation is available.
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*
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* Since: 2.6
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*/
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@ -658,6 +691,11 @@
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* This is the platform dependent conversion specifier for scanning
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* and printing values of type #gsize. See also %G_GINT16_FORMAT.
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*
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* Note that this is not necessarily the correct format to scan or
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* print a `size_t`, even though the in-memory representation is the
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* same. The standard C `"zu"` format should be used for `size_t`,
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* assuming a C99-compliant `printf` implementation is available.
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*
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* Since: 2.6
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*/
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