| ▲ | addaon 12 hours ago | |
`assert(false)` is pronounced "this can never happen." It's reasonable to add a comment with /why/ this can never happen, but if that's all the comment would have said, a message adds no value. | ||
| ▲ | eterm 12 hours ago | parent | next [-] | |
Oh I agree, literally `assert(false, "This cannot happen")` is useless, but ensuring message is always there encourages something more like, `assert(false, "This implies the Foo is Barred, but we have the Qux to make sure it never is")`. Ensuring a message encourages people to state the assumptions that are violated, rather than just asserting that their assumptions (which?) don't hold. | ||
| ▲ | breatheoften 8 hours ago | parent | prev [-] | |
what language are we talking about? If it's cpp then the pronounciation depends on compiler flags (perhaps inferred from CMAKE_BUILD_TYPE) | ||