| Much has been said about Daniel J. Bernstein eschewing the Standard C library in publicfile and other softwares. But Bernstein's str_rchr() function was designed to expressly avoid this well-known gotcha of the Standard C string functions. Here's str_rchr() which uses the offset of the terminating NUL as the returned sentinel value: * https://github.com/jdebp/djbwares/blob/trunk/source/str_rchr... And here's it being used (by publicfile's httpd and indeed other programs) to find the basename's extension in order to infer a content type: * https://github.com/jdebp/djbwares/blob/trunk/source/filetype... The extension is always a non-NULL string, that can always be passed to str_equal(). It is just sometimes a zero-length string. It's possible, but a bit clunky, to achieve the same effect with two successive calls to Standard C/C++ strrchr(), or strchr(), the second being: if (!result) result = std::strchr(s, '\0');
Here's me doing that in my own code:* https://github.com/jdebp/nosh/blob/c8d635c284b41b483067d5f58... One can get very lost in the weeds on the comparative merits on different instruction architectures of compiler intrinsics, explicit loop unrolling, whole program optimization, and whatnot. (-: |