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According to MISRA 2008, concatenation of wide and narrow string literals leads to undefined behavior. This is an implicit undefined behavior according to the C standard [ISO/IEC 9899:2011].

Noncompliant Code Example

This noncompliant code example concatenates wide and narrow string literals. Although the behavior is undefined in this case, the programmer probably intended to create a wide string literal.

wchar_t *msg = L"This message is very long, so I want to divide it "
                "into two parts.";

Compliant Solution (Wide String Literals)

If the concatenated string needs to be a wide string literal, each element in the concatenation must be a wide string literal, as in this compliant solution.

wchar_t *msg = L"This message is very long, so I want to divide it "
               L"into two parts.";

Compliant Solution (Narrow String Literals)

If wide string literals are unnecessary, it is better to use narrow string literals, as in this compliant solution.

char *msg = "This message is very long, so I want to divide it "
            "into two parts.";

Risk Assessment

The concatenation of wide and narrow string literals leads to undefined behavior.

Rule

Severity

Likelihood

Remediation Cost

Priority

Level

STR10-C

low

probable

medium

P4

L3

Related Vulnerabilities

Search for vulnerabilities resulting from the violation of this rule on the CERT website.

Related Guidelines

MISRA Rule 2-13-5

Bibliography


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