.. title:: clang-tidy - bugprone-implicit-widening-of-multiplication-result bugprone-implicit-widening-of-multiplication-result =================================================== The check diagnoses instances where a result of a multiplication is implicitly widened, and suggests (with fix-it) to either silence the code by making widening explicit, or to perform the multiplication in a wider type, to avoid the widening afterwards. This is mainly useful when operating on very large buffers. For example, consider: .. code-block:: c++ void zeroinit(char* base, unsigned width, unsigned height) { for(unsigned row = 0; row != height; ++row) { for(unsigned col = 0; col != width; ++col) { char* ptr = base + row * width + col; *ptr = 0; } } } This is fine in general, but if ``width * height`` overflows, you end up wrapping back to the beginning of ``base`` instead of processing the entire requested buffer. Indeed, this only matters for pretty large buffers (4GB+), but that can happen very easily for example in image processing, where for that to happen you "only" need a ~269MPix image. Options ------- .. option:: UseCXXStaticCastsInCppSources When suggesting fix-its for C++ code, should C++-style ``static_cast<>()``'s be suggested, or C-style casts. Defaults to ``true``. .. option:: UseCXXHeadersInCppSources When suggesting to include the appropriate header in C++ code, should ```` header be suggested, or ````. Defaults to ``true``. Examples: .. code-block:: c++ long mul(int a, int b) { return a * b; // warning: performing an implicit widening conversion to type 'long' of a multiplication performed in type 'int' } char* ptr_add(char *base, int a, int b) { return base + a * b; // warning: result of multiplication in type 'int' is used as a pointer offset after an implicit widening conversion to type 'ssize_t' } char ptr_subscript(char *base, int a, int b) { return base[a * b]; // warning: result of multiplication in type 'int' is used as a pointer offset after an implicit widening conversion to type 'ssize_t' }