On Wed, 24 Jan 2007 10:49:07 +0100
Jonas Maebe wrote
HASINLINE is simply a temporary internal compiler define which was
introduced to indicate that the compiler supports the "inline"
directive. It is not to be used your own code, since it will be
removed from the compiler (it even has already been removed from
2.1.1, and may not even exist anymore in 2.0.4).
I don't think the compiler defines a symbol when inlining is turned
on. As of 2.1.1, it won't matter anymore either since the compiler
will always accept the inline specifier, but only actually do
something with it if inlining is turned on.
Will there be a way to really know if inline is taken into consideration?
That is not about inlining, but about stackframes. Stackframe
optimization is implemented in 2.1.1 as well.
Thanks for the answer.
I hope the next 2.2 release will have all these new features.
Greetings.
Alexander
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