On Wed, Nov 02, 2005 at 08:44:51PM -0500, Daniel Jacobowitz wrote:
> On Wed, Nov 02, 2005 at 05:32:51PM -0800, Joe Buck wrote:
> > On Thu, Nov 03, 2005 at 02:13:05AM +0100, Gabriel Dos Reis wrote:
> > > | Have -Wuninitialized be a very simple detector, which is either in the 
> > > front-ends
> > > | or in the middle-end so it could be shared (just like -Wunused).
> > > | Have -Wuninitialized=2, be the current -Wuninitialized.
> > > 
> > > That is backward.  Have -Wuninitialized means whatever it means today.
> > 
> > Agreed.  We don't want it to change much; people who use -Wall -Werror
> > will be particularly pissed off if gcc produces new, but bogus, warnings
> > for uninitialized variables (please feel free to produce new, but *valid*,
> > warnings).
> 
> People who use -Wall -Werror are _already_ pissed off about
> -Wuninitialized.  It virtually guarantees that your build will fail on
> a new release of GCC.

I don't have that experience, but that's mainly because I use more than
one compiler version and turn warnings on in all.  Anything marginal
is probably gone already.

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