On Wed, Aug 15, 2007 at 10:52:53PM +0200, Segher Boessenkool wrote: > >>I think this was just terminology confusion here again. Isn't "any > >>code > >>that it cannot currently see" the same as "another compilation unit", > >>and wouldn't the "compilation unit" itself expand if we ask gcc to > >>compile more than one unit at once? Or is there some more specific > >>"definition" for "compilation unit" (in gcc lingo, possibly?) > > > >This is indeed my understanding -- "compilation unit" is whatever the > >compiler looks at in one go. I have heard the word "module" used for > >the minimal compilation unit covering a single .c file and everything > >that it #includes, but there might be a better name for this. > > Yes, that's what's called "compilation unit" :-) > > [/me double checks] > > Erm, the C standard actually calls it "translation unit". > > To be exact, to avoid any more confusion: > > 5.1.1.1/1: > A C program need not all be translated at the same time. The > text of the program is kept in units called source files, (or > preprocessing files) in this International Standard. A source > file together with all the headers and source files included > via the preprocessing directive #include is known as a > preprocessing translation unit. After preprocessing, a > preprocessing translation unit is called a translation unit.
I am OK with "translation" and "compilation" being near-synonyms. ;-) Thanx, Paul - To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe netdev" in the body of a message to [EMAIL PROTECTED] More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html