In programs, we usually declare constant string
data. Like:
const char* g_pchar = "this is a string";
You might be knowing that if we run multiple copies of an EXE or DLL, the code portion is not duplicated per process. So do the constant data. This is because the constant data is stored in a special section of EXE called ".rdata
" (The code portion is stored in the ".text
" section). But guess what will happen if we have a declaration like..
const CString g_str("this is the worst thing I can do");
Now you've got the CString
object (which is quite small) in the .bss section (.bss section stores nonconstant uninitialized data), and you've also got a character array in the .data section(nonconstant initialized data), neither of which can be backed by the EXE file. To make matters worse, when the program starts, the CString
class must allocate heap memory for a copy of the characters. You would be much better off using a const
character array instead of a CString
object. So never ever declare like that (Reference "Programming Microsoft VC++" by David Kruglinski).
OK, that was the theory. Now the reason why I stated the above theory is that, last week, I installed the latest VS 2008 feature pack. This feature pack had some new classes for MFC. So I decided to check out the new classes. The CWinAppEx
is one among them. On the very first function, I stepped in (constructor of the CWinAppEx
), I found the following piece of code:
const CString strRegEntryNameWorkspace = _T("Workspace");
m_strRegSection = strRegEntryNameWorkspace;
Oops! And when I scrolled up, there was another bunch of similar code:
static const CString strRegEntryNameControlBars = _T("\\ControlBars");
static const CString strWindowPlacementRegSection = _T("WindowPlacement");
static const CString strRectMainKey = _T("MainWindowRect");
static const CString strFlagsKey = _T("Flags");
static const CString strShowCmdKey = _T("ShowCmd");
static const CString strRegEntryNameSizingBars = _T("\\SizingBars");
static const CString strRegEntryVersion = _T("ControlBarVersion");
static const CString strVersionMajorKey = _T("Major");
static const CString strVersionMinorKey = _T("Minor");
I don't think anyone has seen such a badly written, poor quality code in the old MFC 4 code. Never did I. If MFC starts like this, where will the developers using MFC end up?
When I discussed about this in Codeproject and MSDN forum, I got some interesting response. That's how I came to here about Wirth's law[^] , which states:
Software gets slower, faster than hardware gets faster.
or
Software is decelerating faster than hardware is accelerating.
Very true and you just saw one example.
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