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Off-By-One

Off-by-one errors are a common mistake made by programmers in which the intended boundaries are incorrect by only one, though these errors may seem insignificant, the effect can easily be quite severe.

Array lengths

Properly determining intended array lengths is a common source of off-by-one errors. Particularly since 0-indexing means the final value in an array is array.length - 1.

Consider for example a function intended to loop over a list of recipients to transfer funds to each user, but the loop length is incorrectly set.

// Incorrectly sets upper bound to users.length - 1
// Final user in array doesn't receive token transfer
for (uint256 i; i < users.length - 1; ++i) {
	token.transfer(users[i], 1 ether);
}

Incorrect comparison operator

It's common for comparison operators to be off by one when, e.g. > should be used in place of >=. This is especially common when the logic includes some kind of negation, leading to mental friction in deciphering the intended vs implemented bounds.

Consider for example a Defi protocol with liquidation logic documented to liquidate a user only if their collateralization ratio is below 1e18.

// Incorrectly liquidates if collateralizationRatio is == 1 ether
if (collateralizationRatio > 1 ether) {
	...
} else {
	liquidate();
}

Sources