Am Mittwoch, dem 12.03.2025 um 16:58 +0000 schrieb Joseph Myers: > On Wed, 12 Mar 2025, Martin Uecker wrote: > > > For a designator > > > > struct foo { int n; } a = { .n = 1 }; > > > > we also refer to a member 'n' of an instance 'a' of a structure type. > > The instance is simply implied by the context. > > > > For > > > > struct foo { int n; char *x __counted_by(.n) }; > > > > is also refers to a member of an instance of the struct. The > > instance is the 'a' which is later used in an expression 'a.x' > > So the instance would again be implied by the context. > > > > So for me this makes perfect sense in both cases (and > > for both C and C++) > > The main concern with the designator syntax is if you try to embed it in > arbitrary expressions (that is, say that __counted_by takes an expression, > but with an additional kind of primary-expression .IDENTIFIER that can be > used as a sub-expression therein). The above is fine, but > > struct foo { int n; char *x __counted_by((struct bar){.n = 1}.n }; > > leaves an ambiguity of whether ".n = 1" is a designated initializer in the > struct bar compound literal, or an assignment expression where .n refers > to the member of the struct foo for which the number of elements of x is > being counted. Note that N3188 definitely does not allow .IDENTIFIER as > part of an expression, only as an alternative to an expression in an array > declarator.
My solution for this would be to simply state that in a position in the grammar where a designator is allowed, this then has to be parsed as a designator. So if struct bar has no member 'n' this would be a syntax error. Martin >