On Tue, Aug 23, 2022 at 05:27:00PM -0400, Jason Merrill wrote: > On 8/23/22 09:39, Marek Polacek wrote: > > + tree arg = CALL_EXPR_ARG (fn, 0); > > + extract_op (arg); > > + if (TREE_CODE (arg) == ADDR_EXPR) > > + arg = TREE_OPERAND (arg, 0); > > + tree type = TREE_TYPE (lhs); > > + lhs = maybe_undo_parenthesized_ref (lhs); > > + STRIP_ANY_LOCATION_WRAPPER (lhs); > > + const bool print_var_p = (DECL_P (lhs) > > + || REFERENCE_REF_P (lhs) > > + || TREE_CODE (lhs) == COMPONENT_REF); > > Why include REFERENCE_REF_P and COMPONENT_REF? Reference refs should be > stripped before this test, member refs aren't variables.
I'm checking REFERENCE_REF_P and COMPONENT_REF to say "moving a variable" in #1 and #3. The REFERENCE_REF_P check means that we also say "variable" for #2. Sure, "A variable is introduced by the declaration of a reference other than a non-static data member", but I'm not sure if users care about that here? If I strip REFERENCE_REFs before the check then the result will be the same. Or I could keep only the DECL_P check, but then we'll say "moving an expression" for #1 and #2, which seems strange. struct S { int x; int &r; void foo () { x = std::move (x); // #1 r = std::move (r); // #2 }; }; void foo (int &r) { r = std::move (r); // #3 } Marek