From: Carl Worth Date: Mon, 19 Oct 2009 20:09:19 +0000 (-0700) Subject: date.c: Remove all occurrences of g_return_val_if_fail X-Git-Tag: 0.1~835 X-Git-Url: http://git.tremily.us/?a=commitdiff_plain;h=dbadca9a63ce9e97dc2d80fb0fee7ba2f8640316;p=notmuch.git date.c: Remove all occurrences of g_return_val_if_fail That's got to be one of the hardest macro names to read, ever, (it's phrased with an implicit negative in the condition, rather than something simple like "assert"). Plus, it's evil, since it's a macro with a return in it. And finally, it's actually *longer* than just typing "if" and "return". So what's the point of this ugly idiom? --- diff --git a/date.c b/date.c index f169d616..016af4ea 100644 --- a/date.c +++ b/date.c @@ -222,8 +222,9 @@ static int get_wday (const char *in, size_t inlen) { int wday; - - g_return_val_if_fail (in != NULL, -1); + + if (in == NULL) + return -1; if (inlen < 3) return -1; @@ -241,7 +242,8 @@ get_mday (const char *in, size_t inlen) { int mday; - g_return_val_if_fail (in != NULL, -1); + if (in == NULL) + return -1; mday = decode_int (in, inlen); @@ -256,7 +258,8 @@ get_month (const char *in, size_t inlen) { int i; - g_return_val_if_fail (in != NULL, -1); + if (in == NULL) + return -1; if (inlen < 3) return -1; @@ -274,7 +277,8 @@ get_year (const char *in, size_t inlen) { int year; - g_return_val_if_fail (in != NULL, -1); + if (in == NULL) + return -1; if ((year = decode_int (in, inlen)) == -1) return -1; @@ -405,7 +409,8 @@ parse_rfc822_date (date_token *tokens, int *tzone) struct tm tm; time_t t; - g_return_val_if_fail (tokens != NULL, (time_t) 0); + if (tokens == NULL) + return 0; token = tokens;