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Has to do with the style of code as well as the libraries you link to. The use of unbounded structures and imprecisely tracked memory objects adds to that mix In order for static analysis to be useful, code has to be written to allow for deep analysis
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Compare bugs found with ASan/UBSan/TSan + testing / fuzzing vs. static analysis. Static analysis barely finds anything. It also tends to have lots of false positives, which are harmful, and encourage making changes to the code which can and often does lead to introducing bugs.
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Choosing safe architectures and tools is obviously part of good design. Those design choices made before starting to write any code for the implementation are some of the most important. Static analysis can be quite helpful, but depends a lot on the language making it work well.
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Static analysis doesn't work well for C, due to the lack of memory safety and very weak type system. It's very difficult to accurately analyze. It loses far more of the intent behind the design than a safer language and/or one with features for writing more structured code.
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I haven't made any statements that resemble "it seems plausible to me". You keep taking the approach of attacking me and misrepresenting what I've been saying. The statements I made about static analysis and self-explanatory. It works better when code has stronger guarantees.
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Type systems themselves can be used to enforce many guarantees. That's a much more rigorous form of static analysis compared to heuristic-based checks. Rust's type system statically guarantees things like methods requiring an open file not ever being called on a closed file.
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An external static analyzer has to build on top of the type system. When it looks at code doing something like writing to a reference, knowing that the reference is guaranteed to point to only something with that type is a big deal, as are further memory dependency guarantees.
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