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Re: Program received signal SIGSEGV, Segmentation fault.


From: Noah Lavine
Subject: Re: Program received signal SIGSEGV, Segmentation fault.
Date: Fri, 16 Nov 2012 21:19:16 -0500

Hello,

On Fri, Nov 16, 2012 at 6:32 PM, Bruce Korb <address@hidden> wrote:
On 11/16/12 13:23, Mark H Weaver wrote:
>> Actually, it was scm_from_utf8_string, since GUILE_VERSION was 200005
>
> Okay, that's the problem.  You told Guile that the C string was encoded
> in UTF-8, but actually it was encoded in Latin-1:

OK, so I tried latin1, too.  (replacing scm_from_utf3_string with
scm_from_latin1_string).  That also does not work.  It replaced the
0xA9 character with '?'.

I am no expert on character encodings, but we've seen errors like this before where it turned out that Guile was attempting to display the character on a terminal which didn't support it, and then the terminal converted it into '?'. Could there have been some change in how Guile displays strings that caused this error? Did it used to show a \-escape sequence?
 
What it all boils down to is that
I am looking for string handling functions that will handle the
NUL terminated list of bytes and keep its nose out of the contents
of the string.  Period.  Full stop.

Could you explain what you're trying to do a little more? If you're calling a function that looks at characters on a string object that doesn't contain valid characters, then it will fail. If you have a NUL-terminated list of bytes that contains only characters valid in some encoding, then the scm_from_*_string functions are supposed to wrap it. So do you intend to make a string object and then never look inside? Or are you going to roll your own string-handling starting from byte sequences? The rest of your email suggests not.
 
Thanks,
Noah


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