6 Dec 21:28
Re: [Review] UUID library (mini-)review starts today, November 23rd
Scott McMurray <me22.ca+boost <at> gmail.com>
2008-12-06 20:28:30 GMT
2008-12-06 20:28:30 GMT
On Sat, Dec 6, 2008 at 15:18, Andy Tompkins <atompkins <at> fastmail.fm> wrote: > On Wed, 03 Dec 2008 22:05:39 -0300, "Agustín K-ballo Bergé" > <kaballo86 <at> hotmail.com> said: >> >> Andy Tompkins escribió: >> > It could easily be made static. It will _always_ return 16. >> > >> Even for architectures with chars bigger than 8 bits long? From a >> quick read of the library source code, and boost::integer >> documentation, it seems that the library would not compile there. > > Hmm, can anyone verify this? I will address this if it is a problem. > > What are the guarantees of the size of a byte? Is a byte always 8 bits? > By C++ definition, a byte is the size of a char, and contains at least 8 bits. My understanding is that posix sockets require CHAR_BIT == 8, so outside of DSP chips and other special hardware, that's almost always the case. Considering that UUIDs were originally designed for RPC -- typically over sockets -- and that the v1 algorithm is defined using MAC addresses, it's probably a safe assumption. _______________________________________________ Boost-users mailing list Boost-users <at> lists.boost.org http://lists.boost.org/mailman/listinfo.cgi/boost-users
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