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by fsckboy
407 days ago
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>leveraging undefined behavior for optimizations that is a poor way to handle UB as it introduces bugs (which are UB themselves). If a compiler detects UB, it should flag an error so the source code gets changed. compilers (or any software really) should never be maliciously compliant. |
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If compilers did not take advantage of this, then a lot of behavior would not have to be undefined in the first place. Undefined behavior isn't conjured up from a magical place, it was deliberately specified for a reason.
The subject of the linked article, strict aliasing, is a prime example of exactly that: Surprisingly strict rules for aliasing, giving compilers the opportunity to better optimize code that follows these rules, at the risk of breaking code that does not follow the rules in arbitrary and perhaps unintuitive ways.
Now, these particular rules are controversial, and the article acknowledges this:
Nevertheless, there are many other rules that are much more readily accepted where similar things are taking place.