There are several noteworthy incompatibilities between GNU C and most existing (non-ANSI) versions of C. The `-traditional' option eliminates many of these incompatibilities, but not all, by telling GNU C to behave like the other C compilers.
GNU CC normally makes string constants read-only. If several identical-looking string constants are used, GNU CC stores only one copy of the string.
One consequence is that you cannot call mktemp
with a string constant argument. The function mktemp
always alters the string its argument points to.
Another consequence is that sscanf
does not work on some systems when passed a string constant as its format control string or input. This is because sscanf
incorrectly tries to write into the string constant. Likewise fscanf
and scanf
.
The best solution to these problems is to change the program to use char
-array variables with initialization strings for these purposes instead of string constants. But if this is not possible, you can use the `-fwritable-strings' flag, which directs GNU CC to handle string constants the same way most C compilers do. `-traditional' also has this effect, among others.
-2147483648
is positive.
This is because 2147483648 cannot fit in the type int
, so (following the ANSI C rules) its data type is unsigned long int
. Negating this value yields 2147483648 again.
GNU CC does not substitute macro arguments when they appear inside of string constants. For example, the following macro in GNU CC
#define foo(a) "a"
will produce output "a"
regardless of what the argument a is.
The `-traditional' option directs GNU CC to handle such cases (among others) in the old-fashioned (non-ANSI) fashion.
When you use setjmp
and longjmp
, the only automatic variables guaranteed to remain valid are those declared volatile
. This is a consequence of automatic register allocation. Consider this function:
jmp_buf j; foo () { int a, b; a = fun1 (); if (setjmp (j)) return a; a = fun2 (); /*longjmp (j)
may occur infun3
. */ return a + fun3 (); }
Here a
may or may not be restored to its first value when the longjmp
occurs. If a
is allocated in a register, then its first value is restored; otherwise, it keeps the last value stored in it.
If you use the `-W' option with the `-O' option, you will get a warning when GNU CC thinks such a problem might be possible.
The `-traditional' option directs GNU C to put variables in the stack by default, rather than in registers, in functions that call setjmp
. This results in the behavior found in traditional C compilers.
Programs that use preprocessing directives in the middle of macro arguments do not work with GNU CC. For example, a program like this will not work:
foobar ( #define luser hack)
ANSI C does not permit such a construct. It would make sense to support it when `-traditional' is used, but it is too much work to implement.
Declarations of external variables and functions within a block apply only to the block containing the declaration. In other words, they have the same scope as any other declaration in the same place.
In some other C compilers, a extern
declaration affects all the rest of the file even if it happens within a block.
The `-traditional' option directs GNU C to treat all extern
declarations as global, like traditional compilers.
In traditional C, you can combine long
, etc., with a typedef name, as shown here:
typedef int foo; typedef long foo bar;
In ANSI C, this is not allowed: long
and other type modifiers require an explicit int
. Because this criterion is expressed by Bison grammar rules rather than C code, the `-traditional' flag cannot alter it.
PCC allows typedef names to be used as function parameters. The difficulty described immediately above applies here too.
PCC allows whitespace in the middle of compound assignment operators such as `+='. GNU CC, following the ANSI standard, does not allow this. The difficulty described immediately above applies here too.
GNU CC complains about unterminated character constants inside of preprocessing conditionals that fail. Some programs have English comments enclosed in conditionals that are guaranteed to fail; if these comments contain apostrophes, GNU CC will probably report an error. For example, this code would produce an error:
#if 0 You can't expect this to work. #endif
The best solution to such a problem is to put the text into an actual C comment delimited by `/*...*/'. However, `-traditional' suppresses these error messages.
Many user programs contain the declaration `long time ();'. In the past, the system header files on many systems did not actually declare time
, so it did not matter what type your program declared it to return. But in systems with ANSI C headers, time
is declared to return time_t
, and if that is not the same as long
, then `long time ();' is erroneous.
The solution is to change your program to use time_t
as the return type of time
.
When compiling functions that return float
, PCC converts it to a double. GNU CC actually returns a float
. If you are concerned with PCC compatibility, you should declare your functions to return double
; you might as well say what you mean.
When compiling functions that return structures or unions, GNU CC output code normally uses a method different from that used on most versions of Unix. As a result, code compiled with GNU CC cannot call a structure-returning function compiled with PCC, and vice versa.
The method used by GNU CC is as follows: a structure or union which is 1, 2, 4 or 8 bytes long is returned like a scalar. A structure or union with any other size is stored into an address supplied by the caller (usually in a special, fixed register, but on some machines it is passed on the stack). The machine-description macros STRUCT_VALUE
and STRUCT_INCOMING_VALUE
tell GNU CC where to pass this address.
By contrast, PCC on most target machines returns structures and unions of any size by copying the data into an area of static storage, and then returning the address of that storage as if it were a pointer value. The caller must copy the data from that memory area to the place where the value is wanted. GNU CC does not use this method because it is slower and nonreentrant.
On some newer machines, PCC uses a reentrant convention for all structure and union returning. GNU CC on most of these machines uses a compatible convention when returning structures and unions in memory, but still returns small structures and unions in registers.
You can tell GNU CC to use a compatible convention for all structure and union returning with the option `-fpcc-struct-return'.
GNU C complains about program fragments such as `0x74ae-0x4000' which appear to be two hexadecimal constants separated by the minus operator. Actually, this string is a single preprocessing token. Each such token must correspond to one token in C. Since this does not, GNU C prints an error message. Although it may appear obvious that what is meant is an operator and two values, the ANSI C standard specifically requires that this be treated as erroneous.
A preprocessing token is a preprocessing number if it begins with a digit and is followed by letters, underscores, digits, periods and `e+', `e-', `E+', or `E-' character sequences.
To make the above program fragment valid, place whitespace in front of the minus sign. This whitespace will end the preprocessing number.