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From: Neven Sajko <nsajko@gmail.com>
To: Jan Kratochvil <jan.kratochvil@redhat.com>
Cc: gdb@sourceware.org
Subject: Re: Printing a 2D array in a C program
Date: Fri, 04 Mar 2016 16:15:00 -0000	[thread overview]
Message-ID: <CAL+bK4MV9ZLkon2PONYRpF0506P8zE3=Ukm0F1zpVDHd2HpAtw@mail.gmail.com> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <20160304144231.GA7767@host1.jankratochvil.net>

On 4 March 2016 at 15:42, Jan Kratochvil <jan.kratochvil@redhat.com> wrote:
> On Fri, 04 Mar 2016 15:27:14 +0100, Neven Sajko wrote:
>> In my C program there is a square matrix implemented as an array
>> of arrays, which prints nicely in GDB with `info locals`.
>
> I do not understand how that can happen.
> You should always provide sample code / example.
>
>
>> But how can that nice output be accomplished if you are not in
>> the function in which the array was declared, but just have it
>> passed as a function parameter.
>
> If it is a pointer (as you say C, not C++ reference) you should be able to:
>         (gdb) print *thatpointername
> Then GDB should IMO print it the same as a local variable is printed.
>
>
> Printing of C++ vectors of vectors (which is BTW wrong data structure for a 2D
> matrix anyway) as a matrix was implemented by Chris Moller as a Python Pretty
> printer in some versions of Fedora GDB but it was later discontinued.  The
> initial implementation was:
>         http://pkgs.fedoraproject.org/cgit/rpms/gdb.git/commit/?id=6068e6305ed7d05b4a919c28aa5bcb737e1f163b
> (gdb) p test2
> $2 =
>   {
>     {0      1    }
>     {2      3    }
>     {4      5    }
>  }
>
>
>
> Jan
 Thanks for your answer, Jan.

In my question I asked about C (not C++), I even mentioned the
gcc -std=gnu90 option.

My code is thus:

enum {
        sz = 17
};

void p(int m[sz][sz], int n) {
        int i;
        for (i=1; i<n; i++) {
                int j;
                for (j=i-1; 0<=j; j--) {
                        m[i][j] = abs(3*m[i-1][j] +2*m[i][j+1]) % 9340506;
                }
        }
}

void f(int n) {
        int m[sz][sz];

        g(m, n);

        p(m, n);

        r(m, n);
}


So, when I am in f, `info locals` prints it like {{a11, ...,
a1n}, ..., {an1, ..., ann}}.
But in p `print *m` just gets me {a11, ..., a1n}.


  reply	other threads:[~2016-03-04 16:15 UTC|newest]

Thread overview: 12+ messages / expand[flat|nested]  mbox.gz  Atom feed  top
2016-03-04 14:27 Neven Sajko
2016-03-04 14:42 ` Jan Kratochvil
2016-03-04 16:15   ` Neven Sajko [this message]
2016-03-04 17:49     ` Jan Kratochvil
2016-03-04 18:24       ` Pedro Alves
2016-03-04 18:59         ` Jan Kratochvil
2016-03-04 19:16           ` Pedro Alves
2016-03-04 18:34     ` Andreas Schwab
2016-03-04 21:48       ` Neven Sajko
2016-03-04 22:16         ` Andreas Schwab
2016-03-05  0:59           ` Neven Sajko
2016-03-05  8:23             ` Andreas Schwab

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