The following options control the dialect of C (or languages derived from C, such as C++ and Objective C) that the compiler accepts:
-ansi
This turns off certain features of GNU C that are incompatible with ANSI C, such as the asm
, inline
and typeof
keywords, and predefined macros such as unix
and vax
that identify the type of system you are using. It also enables the undesirable and rarely used ANSI trigraph feature, and disallows `$' as part of identifiers.
The alternate keywords __asm__
, __extension__
, __inline__
and __typeof__
continue to work despite `-ansi'. You would not want to use them in an ANSI C program, of course, but it is useful to put them in header files that might be included in compilations done with `-ansi'. Alternate predefined macros such as __unix__
and __vax__
are also available, with or without `-ansi'.
The `-ansi' option does not cause non-ANSI programs to be rejected gratuitously. For that, `-pedantic' is required in addition to `-ansi'. See Warning Options.
The macro __STRICT_ANSI__
is predefined when the `-ansi' option is used. Some header files may notice this macro and refrain from declaring certain functions or defining certain macros that the ANSI standard doesn't call for; this is to avoid interfering with any programs that might use these names for other things.
The functions alloca
, abort
, exit
, and _exit
are not builtin functions when `-ansi' is used.
-fno-asm
asm
, inline
or typeof
as a keyword, so that code can use these words as identifiers. You can use the keywords __asm__
, __inline__
and __typeof__
instead. `-ansi' implies `-fno-asm'.
In C++, this switch only affects the typeof
keyword, since asm
and inline
are standard keywords. You may want to use the `-fno-gnu-keywords' flag instead, as it also disables the other, C++-specific, extension keywords such as headof
.
-fno-builtin
abort
, abs
, alloca
, cos
, exit
, fabs
, ffs
, labs
, memcmp
, memcpy
, sin
, sqrt
, strcmp
, strcpy
, and strlen
.
GCC normally generates special code to handle certain builtin functions more efficiently; for instance, calls to alloca
may become single instructions that adjust the stack directly, and calls to memcpy
may become inline copy loops. The resulting code is often both smaller and faster, but since the function calls no longer appear as such, you cannot set a breakpoint on those calls, nor can you change the behavior of the functions by linking with a different library.
The `-ansi' option prevents alloca
and ffs
from being builtin functions, since these functions do not have an ANSI standard meaning.
-trigraphs
-traditional
All extern
declarations take effect globally even if they are written inside of a function definition. This includes implicit declarations of functions.
The newer keywords typeof
, inline
, signed
, const
and volatile
are not recognized. (You can still use the alternative keywords such as __typeof__
, __inline__
, and so on.)
Comparisons between pointers and integers are always allowed.
Integer types unsigned short
and unsigned char
promote to unsigned int
.
Out-of-range floating point literals are not an error.
Certain constructs which ANSI regards as a single invalid preprocessing number, such as `0xe-0xd', are treated as expressions instead.
String ``constants'' are not necessarily constant; they are stored in writable space, and identical looking constants are allocated separately. (This is the same as the effect of `-fwritable-strings'.)
All automatic variables not declared register
are preserved by longjmp
. Ordinarily, GNU C follows ANSI C: automatic variables not declared volatile
may be clobbered.
The character escape sequences `\x' and `\a' evaluate as the literal characters `x' and `a' respectively. Without `-traditional', `\x' is a prefix for the hexadecimal representation of a character, and `\a' produces a bell.
In C++ programs, assignment to this
is permitted with `-traditional'. (The option `-fthis-is-variable' also has this effect.)
You may wish to use `-fno-builtin' as well as `-traditional' if your program uses names that are normally GNU C builtin functions for other purposes of its own.
You cannot use `-traditional' if you include any header files that rely on ANSI C features. Some vendors are starting to ship systems with ANSI C header files and you cannot use `-traditional' on such systems to compile files that include any system headers.
In the preprocessor, comments convert to nothing at all, rather than to a space. This allows traditional token concatenation.
In preprocessing directive, the `#' symbol must appear as the first character of a line.
In the preprocessor, macro arguments are recognized within string constants in a macro definition (and their values are stringified, though without additional quote marks, when they appear in such a context). The preprocessor always considers a string constant to end at a newline.
The predefined macro __STDC__
is not defined when you use `-traditional', but __GNUC__
is (since the GNU extensions which __GNUC__
indicates are not affected by `-traditional'). If you need to write header files that work differently depending on whether `-traditional' is in use, by testing both of these predefined macros you can distinguish four situations: GNU C, traditional GNU C, other ANSI C compilers, and other old C compilers. The predefined macro __STDC_VERSION__
is also not defined when you use `-traditional'. See Standard Predefined Macros, for more discussion of these and other predefined macros.
The preprocessor considers a string constant to end at a newline (unless the newline is escaped with `\'). (Without `-traditional', string constants can contain the newline character as typed.)
-traditional-cpp
-fcond-mismatch
-funsigned-char
char
be unsigned, like unsigned char
.
Each kind of machine has a default for what char
should be. It is either like unsigned char
by default or like signed char
by default.
Ideally, a portable program should always use signed char
or unsigned char
when it depends on the signedness of an object. But many programs have been written to use plain char
and expect it to be signed, or expect it to be unsigned, depending on the machines they were written for. This option, and its inverse, let you make such a program work with the opposite default.
The type char
is always a distinct type from each of signed char
or unsigned char
, even though its behavior is always just like one of those two.
-fsigned-char
char
be signed, like signed char
. Note that this is equivalent to `-fno-unsigned-char', which is the negative form of `-funsigned-char'. Likewise, the option `-fno-signed-char' is equivalent to `-funsigned-char'.
-fsigned-bitfields
-funsigned-bitfields
-fno-signed-bitfields
-fno-unsigned-bitfields
signed
or unsigned
. By default, such a bitfield is signed, because this is consistent: the basic integer types such as int
are signed types. However, when `-traditional' is used, bitfields are all unsigned no matter what.
-fwritable-strings
Writing into string constants is a very bad idea; ``constants'' should be constant.
-fallow-single-precision
Traditional K&R C promotes all floating point operations to double precision, regardless of the sizes of the operands. On the architecture for which you are compiling, single precision may be faster than double precision. If you must use `-traditional', but want to use single precision operations when the operands are single precision, use this option. This option has no effect when compiling with ANSI or GNU C conventions (the default).