I think not, but since I didn't find any way of flagging it, I'll just post it here. The edit in question is this, the corresponding question is here. In short, the answer says "This will not work because x=y", while the edit replaces it with "x=z". It does not ultimately matter for the answer whether x=y or x=z, so it is not a major edit, but I'd say still a nontrivial one.
In the comments of that answer, someone actually asks "Shouldn't it be -Inf
(x=z) not NaN
(x=y)? And the answer poster himself comments "That's implementation dependent".
I find it inappropriate (rude?) to evade the discussion in the comments by just editing it into the answer. Also, I guess that robo editers would just approve anything that is there. If you think the answer is technically wrong and you see that the poster doesn't agree with you, downvote it instead of enforcing the change..
log(0.0)
is not implementation-dependent, as there is no reference to back the comment. Our currently preferred C++ reference says it returns-Inf
, but the question is tagged[c]
, so... who knows.x=y
andy=x
— automatic type casting can change the outcome depending which variable comes first. I'm not sure if it matters with C, but I think it might, for example if x is an int and y is a float.