programming What happens when you try to store more data in
a
buffer than it can handle. This may be due to a mismatch
in the processing rates of the producing and consuming
the buffer is simply too small to hold all the data that must
accumulate before a piece of it can be processed. For
example, in a text-processing tool that
crunches a line at a
time, a short line buffer can result in
lossage as input
from a long line overflows the buffer and overwrites data
beyond it. Good defensive programming would check for
overflow on each character and stop accepting data when the
buffer is full.
(1996-05-13)