On Fri, 30 Apr 2010 09:51:44 +0200
Jonas Maebe <jonas.ma...@elis.ugent.be> wrote:

> 
> On 30 Apr 2010, at 09:40, spir ☣ wrote:
> 
> > -1- "local" variable
> > When a program-global variable is unused, the compiler message reads  
> > 'Note: Local variable "x" not used'.
> > Is this a mistake or do I misunderstand some point?
> 
> Such variables are local to the current program or to the unit (in  
> case they are declared in the implementation of a unit). We could just  
> remove the "local" though.

Right. Say they're not always really global, but "local" sounds a bit 
misleading to me.

> > -2- place of error messages
> > In the output, warnings seem to always come before the deadly  
> > 'Compilation failed'. But error messages seem to randomly be placed  
> > before, after, or even both. Is there a logic I don't catch behind  
> > this? Or is it a bug of my terminal's writing system (I use a VTE).
> 
> I've never seen that.

May be the VTE messes up stream(s). [But this is also related to the stream 
source. Eg the same VTE used to mess up stdout and stderr streams from another 
language. Since a given version of the lang (python), this does not happen 
anymore.]

> > -3- linker message
> > I systematically get
> > '/use/bin/ld: warning: link.res contains output sections; did you  
> > forget -T?'
> > What does this mean?
> 
> http://www.freepascal.org/faq.var#unix-ld219

Thank you very much. Below the FAQ entry:

======
An error occurred while linking, or "did you forget -T?"

There is a bug in GNU LD 2.19 and 2.19.1 that causes it to crash when 
processing FPC-generated linker scripts. This bug has been fixed in the mean 
time.

At the same time, LD has been modified to emit a warning of the form

               /usr/bin/ld: warning: link.res contains output sections; did you 
forget -T?
            

This warning is benign, and FPC intentionally does not pass -T to LD. The 
reason is that if -T is used, LD's internal linker script is ignored and only 
FPC's linker script is used. Such linker scripts also contain paths to 
libraries however, and if we would ignore the internal linker script then LD 
would no longer find libraries in distribution-specific directories.
=======

Isnt't it possible to switch off specific (types of) ld warnings? Sure, it's 
not a big deal since we know we can safely ignore this very message. But the 
output does not look clean, actually it looks like wrong, even more since this 
very warning is painted red ;-)
Anyway...

Denis
________________________________

vit esse estrany ☣

spir.wikidot.com
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