Hi, thanks for the reply. On 4/8/12 6:25 AM, Joseph S. Myers wrote:
Character pairs like this don't seem very extensible, in that you are providing meanings for any even-length string, rather than (for example) only a limited subset of strings leaving room for meanings to be assigned later to other strings.
Future extensions could use identifiers rather than strings, or other syntax, but understood.
They also have the obvious problem of not covering application-specific types as arguments, only types that have corresponding standard formats.
Agreed.
In principle we want extensibility of format checking, and want it to be as flexible as the built-in checking is regarding the peculiarities of different formats - but we also don't want to export implementation details of format checking to users' source code, and the two points seem rather to contradict each others. So my recent inclination has been that we should make it possible for plugins to add new format checking types (but the details of the relevant interfaces would be unstable, so such plugins might need to change for each GCC version). That means a function for a plugin to register a new format type - and probably a callback called when that format type is used for a function declaration that can look for a typedef name in the same way that the existing GCC-internal formats are handled.
The plugin architecture would work great for format strings that are very different from printf/scanf, but seems heavyweight for format strings that are close to printf/scanf.
Would a better syntax for "printf/scanf + extensions" format strings be worth accepting independent of plugins?
For instance: __attribute__(printf, 1, 1, '<' ('%'), ';' ('0')) ==> treat '<' like '%' and ';' like '0' __attribute__(printf, 1, 1, '<' (), 'F' (expr *)) ==> '<' takes 0 arguments, 'F' takes an expr * argument in the list Best, Eddie