| Gottfried Helms on Sat, 05 Nov 2022 23:43:22 +0100 |
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| Bug in evaluating "if(p==[],...)" |
This is a funny bug.
I have a function with two arguments (p,q);
- if in argument p is a scalar value, a vector in q is expected,
- if in p is a vector, in q is a scalar expected.
The vectors can be empty (p=[] or q=[]), their type being vector
simply indicates, that some specific sequel has to be worked.
Here is the maximally reduced function:
{testfindroots_pq(p=[],q=[]) = my();
if(p==[]
,print("p=",p," q=",q," ---> heading in p==[] path ");
,print("p=",p," q=",q," ---> heading in p<>[] path ");
); }
Here the result:
testfindroots_pq([],1) \\ p=[] q=1 ---> heading in p==[] path +++ correct
testfindroots_pq([],0) \\ p=[] q=0 ---> heading in p==[] path +++ correct
testfindroots_pq(1,[]) \\ p=1 q=[] ---> heading in p<>[] path +++ correct
testfindroots_pq(0,[]) \\ p=0 q=[] ---> heading in p==[] path ***** false *****
The problem is here, that supplying the scalar integer value "0" is
taken as "==[]" (but not for instance the integer value "1")
Just to note for this tiny bug.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
A correctly working version is of course the more explicite
{testfindroots_pq(p=[],q=[]) = my();
if(type(p)=="t_VEC" \\ <-- this works correctly
,print("p=",p," q=",q," ---> heading in p==[] path ");
,print("p=",p," q=",q," ---> heading in p<>[] path ");
); }
Gottfried Helms