I have ran the code analyzer in visual studio on a large code base and i got about a billion of this error:
warning C6284: Object passed as parameter '3' when string is required in call to 'fprintf'
According to http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ta308ywy.aspx "This defect might produce incorrect output or crashes." My colleague however states that we can just ignore all these errors without any problems. So one of my questions is do we need to do anything about this or can we just leave it as is?
If these errors need to be solved what is the nicest approach to solve it?
Would it work to do like this:
static_cast<const char*>(someCString)
Is there a better or more correct approach for this?
The following lines generate this warning:
CString str;
fprintf(pFile, "text %s", str);
I'm assuming that you're passing a Microsoft "CString" object to a printf()-family function where the corresponding format specifier is %s
. If I'm right, then your answer is here: How can CString be passed to format string %s? (in short, your code is OK).
It seems that originally an implementation detail allowed CString to be passed directly to printf(), and later it was made part of the contract. So you're good to go as far as your program being correct, but if you want to avoid the static analysis warning, you may indeed need to use the static_cast to a char pointer. I'm not sure it's worth it here...maybe there's some other way to make these tools place nice together, since they're all from Microsoft.