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Re: tolower()/islower() and char
> The standard is explicit that the argument must be EOF or an unsigned
> char. There is no way to support both true 8bit locales and
> magically fix this.
No way for ctype.h to do so independent of the rest of the system. But
it's not at all hard to fix it from a libc design perspective; you just
need to choose a value for EOF that is out of range for signed char.
> '\xff' in Latin1 is a letter for example and EOF is not.
But nothing says (signed char)'\xff' == EOF.
Nothing except existing practice, that is; the C spec chose (rightly,
IMO) to support existing practice in this regard.
> I'm still shocked by how many developers have been using C for 20
> years and still manage to not use ctype.h correctly...
I've seen worse. I've even corresponded with someone holding the
curious delusion that uncast NULL was suitable as a stdarg pointer
argument, apparently believing that all pointer types had to be
sufficiently similar, at least in an argument list, that this was
possible.
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