https://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=106520
Bug ID: 106520 Summary: 2+ index expressions in build_op_subscript are incorrectly interpreted as comma expression Product: gcc Version: 12.1.0 Status: UNCONFIRMED Severity: normal Priority: P3 Component: c++ Assignee: unassigned at gcc dot gnu.org Reporter: mkretz at gcc dot gnu.org Target Milestone: --- Commit b38c9cf6d570f6c4c1109e00c8b81d82d0f24df3 implemented Multidimensional subscript operator [PR102611]. However, the backwards compatibility leads to surprising results. E.g.: struct A { void operator[](unsigned); void operator[](unsigned, unsigned); }; struct B { explicit operator unsigned() const; }; void f(A a, B b) { a[1]; a[b, 2]; } Compiles to two calls to A::operator[](unsigned) with the following diagnostics: <source>: In function 'void f(A, B)': <source>:15:4: warning: top-level comma expression in array subscript changed meaning in C++23 [-Wcomma-subscript] 15 | a[b, 2]; | ^ [https://godbolt.org/z/f6vf3x5Gv] The user probably intended to call the two-index subscript overload. But there's no indication why the call failed. The warning is probably puzzling to most users. It's probably not obvious to most users that the "wrong" function gets called. I'm not sure the compatibility issue is worth it. I think it would be better to call build_op_subscript with unmodified complain and let code that turns on -std=c++23 break if it relies on comma expressions in subscripts.