https://issues.dlang.org/show_bug.cgi?id=22030
Iain Buclaw <[email protected]> changed: What |Removed |Added ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- CC| |[email protected] --- Comment #1 from Iain Buclaw <[email protected]> --- A further example: --- int , int; --- When compiled with GCC: --- test.c:1: error: expected identifier or ‘(’ before ‘,’ token --- However DMD compiles with no errors. So DMD is not respecting the grammar in C11 6.7 (and in particular 6.7.6), which says that `int;` is valid (declaration-specifier without an init-declarator-list), but `int,` is not. declaration: declaration-specifiers init-declarator-list(opt); init-declarator-list: init-declarator init-declarator-list , init-declarator init-declarator: declarator declarator = initializer declarator: pointer(opt) direct-declarator direct-declarator: identifier attribute-specifier-sequence(opt) ( declarator ) array-declarator attribute-specifier-sequence(opt) function-declarator attribute-specifier-sequence(opt) --
