Mail Archives: djgpp/1995/10/11/13:01:24
Date: Sat, 7 Oct 1995 12:30:13 +0100 (MET)
From: "Nathan L. Cutler" <library AT ssd DOT anet DOT cz>
I am going through a C tutorial that is very good but quite old. One of the
things it is telling me to do is to enable prototype checking with my
compiler. I am using djgpp. (1) is it actually necessary to turn on proto-
type checking with gcc? and (2) what is the command-line extension to do so?
Gcc does do basic prototype checking, however there are options to add stricter
checking:
-Wconversion
Warn if a prototype causes a type conversion that is different
from what would happen to the same argument in the absence of a
prototype. This includes conversions of fixed point to floating
and vice versa, and conversions changing the width or signedness
of a fixed point argument except when the same as the default
promotion.
-Waggregate-return
Warn if any functions that return structures or unions are
defined or called.
-Wstrict-prototypes
Warn if a function is declared or defined without specifying the
argument types. (An old-style function definition is permitted
without a warning if preceded by a declaration which specifies
the argument types.)
-Wmissing-prototypes
Warn if a global function is defined without a previous prototype
declaration. This warning is issued even if the definition
itself provides a prototype. The aim is to detect global
functions that fail to be declared in header files.
-Wredundant-decls
Warn if anything is declared more than once in the same scope,
even in cases where multiple declaration is valid and changes
nothing.
-Wnested-externs
Warn if an extern declaration is encountered within a function.
-mwarn-passed-structs
Emit a warning message if a structure is passed to a function, or
declared as a function argument. This warns about the places
where gcc will not interoperate with compilers that do not pass
structures according to the 88open Object Compatibility Standard.
--
Art S. Kagel, kagel AT ts1 DOT bloomberg DOT com
Variety is the soul of pleasure. -- Aphra Behn
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