jyknight added inline comments.

================
Comment at: clang/test/CodeGen/2009-06-01-addrofknr.c:8
 
-static int func(f)
+static int func(f) // expected-warning {{this function declaration without a 
prototype is deprecated in all versions of C and changes behavior in C2x}}
   void *f;
----------------
aaron.ballman wrote:
> aaron.ballman wrote:
> > jyknight wrote:
> > > This message seems vaguer than necessary, since we know _for sure_ this 
> > > is invalid.
> > > 
> > > Can we say something like: "K&R-style function definitions are deprecated 
> > > in all versions of C and not supported in C2x"?
> > I'd like to avoid using K&R in the diagnostic text (we're inconsistent 
> > about K&R vs prototype, etc already, but I'd like to see us excise `K&R` 
> > from diagnostics because it's not particularly descriptive to anyone 
> > younger than about 40. :-D
> > 
> > How about: `function declarations without a prototype are deprecated in all 
> > versions of C and not supported in C2x` ?
> I went with `a function declaration without a prototype is deprecated in all 
> versions of C and is not supported in C2x`, let me know if you think it needs 
> further adjusting. I also reworded the other diagnostics to sound similar.
I do agree with you that "K&R" is perhaps not the best name either...

But I think this warning message may still be confusing to users. A typical C 
user I think will be surprised to see a warning about a "declaration" pointing 
to a definition -- even though that is technically accurate. Especially when 
we're complaining concretely about the weird old definition syntax, it would be 
better to say "definition".

It looks like the most common name for this is "old-style function definition" 
-- both GCC and MSVC use that name, and clang also did, before. (Hmmm. And GCC 
actually seems to place this particular warning under the off-by-default 
-Wold-style-definition flag -- which clang doesn't implement.) I don't know 
that "old-style" is a great description either, but "old-style function 
definition" definitely seems more understandable than "function declaration 
without a prototype" when talking about a K&R-style separated-arguments-types 
definition.


================
Comment at: clang/test/Parser/declarators.c:5
 
-void f0();
+void f0(); /* expected-warning {{a function declaration without a prototype is 
deprecated in all versions of C}} */
 void f1(int [*]);
----------------
aaron.ballman wrote:
> aaron.ballman wrote:
> > jyknight wrote:
> > > Perhaps we should add an explanation to the message like
> > >  `(specify '(void)' if you intended to accept no arguments)`
> > > to make it clearer to folks who aren't familiar with this weirdness yet?
> > They're already offered a fixit for this situation, so I don't know that we 
> > need the extra explanation? The user currently gets something like this:
> > ```
> > C:\Users\aballman\OneDrive - Intel Corporation\Desktop\test.c:2:16: 
> > warning: declaration of a function without a prototype is deprecated in all 
> > versions of C [-Wstrict-prototypes]
> > void other_func();
> >                ^
> >                 void
> > ```
> > Do you still think the diagnostic needs to be made longer?
> I elected to leave this alone unless you feel strongly.
I guess I sort of wondered if users might consider "without a prototype" to 
generally indicate "implicit declaration". So, the wording "declaration without 
a prototype" might be like..."wait you're complaining that my declaration 
doesn't have a declaration? Huh? It's right there!"

But, with the fixit hint suggesting the addition of "void", that's probably 
sufficiently explanatory.



================
Comment at: clang/test/Sema/knr-def-call.c:15
+void f2(float); // expected-note{{previous declaration is here}} \
+                   expected-warning {{this function declaration with a 
prototype changes behavior in C2x because it is followed by a function without 
a prototype}}
+void f2(x) float x; { } // expected-warning{{promoted type 'double' of K&R 
function parameter is not compatible with the parameter type 'float' declared 
in a previous prototype}} \
----------------
aaron.ballman wrote:
> aaron.ballman wrote:
> > jyknight wrote:
> > > I think we don't want to emit a warning here. If a declaration with 
> > > params doesn't match a K&R definition, we already emit a 
> > > conflicting-types error.
> > > 
> > > [[Well...except for one case, I've noticed -- we don't current emit any 
> > > warning when a definition with no parameters fails to match a preceding 
> > > declaration with params, e.g. `void f(int); void f() { }`. I'm quite 
> > > surprised -- I'm willing to say that such code is 100% just a bug, not 
> > > intentional. I note that GCC unconditionally rejects it. I think we 
> > > should also be emitting an unconditional error in that case.]]]
> > > 
> > > Anyhow, when you have a K&R style definition with parameters, that -- all 
> > > by itself -- is definitely invalid in C2x, so we don't need to emit any 
> > > warning on the declaration.
> > > I'm quite surprised -- I'm willing to say that such code is 100% just a 
> > > bug, not intentional. I note that GCC unconditionally rejects it. I think 
> > > we should also be emitting an unconditional error in that case.
> > 
> > I'd rather we be consistent here -- either every mixture of 
> > prototype/unprototyped is an error, or they're all a warning. I've added 
> > your example as a test case and we warn on it as being a change of behavior 
> > in C2x, which I think is defensible.
> > 
> > > Anyhow, when you have a K&R style definition with parameters, that -- all 
> > > by itself -- is definitely invalid in C2x, so we don't need to emit any 
> > > warning on the declaration.
> > 
> > I tend to agree, let me see what I can do.
> I addressed this so we no longer diagnose the function with a prototype in 
> the case where it precedes the function without a prototype.
> I'd rather we be consistent here -- either every mixture of 
> prototype/unprototyped is an error, or they're all a warning. I've added your 
> example as a test case and we warn on it as being a change of behavior in 
> C2x, which I think is defensible.

Even before, we are NOT consistent. We emit an error on `void f(int); void f(x) 
float x; {}`, but not for `void f(int); void f() {}`. In both cases, we have a 
prototyped declaration, followed by an old-style "prototypeless" definition. I 
think it would be sensible to diagnose with an unconditional error in both 
cases, not only the former.


Repository:
  rG LLVM Github Monorepo

CHANGES SINCE LAST ACTION
  https://reviews.llvm.org/D122895/new/

https://reviews.llvm.org/D122895

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