rnk added a comment. In D67304#1664696 <https://reviews.llvm.org/D67304#1664696>, @thakis wrote:
> We have the old TODO of changing this warning to be emitted at enum use time > (e.g. when Foo_Val is compared to 0) instead of declaration time. Maybe > that's a better fix. Or is implementing that very involved? I guess it would depend on the logic of the point-of-use warning. We could make it very simple. We could: - mark all enum types with coerced enumerators (maybe we already know this) - warn on all ordering comparisons that use that enum type If the user explicitly casts to any other integer type to do the comparison, we can expect them to know the rules. I think it can't allow false negatives, though. -Wmicrosoft is kind of like our -pedantic mode for standard C. It basically says, if your code is -Wmicrosoft clean, we promise that it is not relying on Microsoft-specific behavior. The simplest way to do that is to soften the existing error to a warning, which is what this does. Repository: rG LLVM Github Monorepo CHANGES SINCE LAST ACTION https://reviews.llvm.org/D67304/new/ https://reviews.llvm.org/D67304 _______________________________________________ cfe-commits mailing list cfe-commits@lists.llvm.org https://lists.llvm.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/cfe-commits