Thanks,
Andrew Pinski
On Friday, October 26, 2001, at 10:40 , [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Number: 4698System: Linux pc-dg-116-1 2.4.12-686 #2 Sat Oct 13 20:13:05 EST 2001 i686 unknown
Category: c
Synopsis: constant beginning with 0 as array index does not compile
Confidential: no
Severity: non-critical
Priority: low
Responsible: unassigned
State: open
Class: rejects-legal
Submitter-Id: net
Arrival-Date: Fri Oct 26 07:46:01 PDT 2001
Closed-Date:
Last-Modified:
Originator:
Release: 3.0.2 (Debian) (Debian testing/unstable)
Organization:
Environment:
Architecture: i686
host: i386-pc-linux-gnu
build: i386-pc-linux-gnu
target: i386-pc-linux-gnu
configured with: ../src/configure -v --enable-
languages=c,c++,java,f77,proto,objc --prefix=/usr --infodir=/share/info --mandir=/share/man --enable-shared --with-gnu-as --with-gnu-ld --with-system-zlib --enable-long-long --enable-nls --without-included-gettext --disable-checking --enable-threads=posix --enable-java-gc=boehm --with-cpp-install-dir=bin --enable-objc-gc i386-linuxDescription:
The following program does not compile:
int main(void) { int tab[011];
tab[09]=1; /* error here only */ tab[10]=02; }
Is it a legal program or is there some subtle C/C++ rule that say it is not ?
How-To-Repeat:
$ gcc essai.c essai.c: In function `main': essai.c:5: numeric constant contains digits beyond the radix
The same error happens both with gcc and g++. I tested versions 2.95.x and 3.0.x.Fix: Release-Note: Audit-Trail: Unformatted: