On Fri, Mar 25, 2022 at 12:34 PM Jakub Jelinek <ja...@redhat.com> wrote:
>
> On Fri, Mar 25, 2022 at 12:16:40PM +0100, Richard Biener wrote:
> > On Fri, Mar 25, 2022 at 11:13 AM Tobias Burnus <tob...@codesourcery.com> 
> > wrote:
> > >
> > > On 25.03.22 09:57, Jakub Jelinek via Fortran wrote:
> > > > On the gfortran.dg/pr103691.f90 testcase the Fortran ICE emits
> > > >    static real(kind=4) a[0] = {[0 ... -1]=2.0e+0};
> > > > That is an invalid RANGE_EXPR where the maximum is smaller than the 
> > > > minimum.
> > > >
> > > > The following patch fixes that.  If TYPE_MAX_VALUE is smaller than
> > > > TYPE_MIN_VALUE, the array is empty and so doesn't need any initializer,
> > > > if the two are equal, we don't need to bother with a RANGE_EXPR and
> > > > can just use that INTEGER_CST as the index and finally for the 2+ values
> > > > in the range it uses a RANGE_EXPR as before.
> > > >
> > > > Bootstrapped/regtested on x86_64-linux and i686-linux, ok for trunk?
> > >
> > > LGTM – thanks for taking care of Fortran patches and regressions.
> > >
> > > > 2022-03-25  Jakub Jelinek  <ja...@redhat.com>
> > > >
> > > >       PR fortran/103691
> > > >       * trans-array.cc (gfc_conv_array_initializer): If TYPE_MAX_VALUE 
> > > > is
> > > >       smaller than TYPE_MIN_VALUE (i.e. empty array), throw the 
> > > > initializer
> > > >       on the floor, if TYPE_MIN_VALUE is equal to TYPE_MAX_VALUE, use 
> > > > just
> > > >       the TYPE_MIN_VALUE as index instead of RANGE_EXPR.
> > >
> > > I am not sure whether "throw the initializer on the floor" is the best 
> > > wording
> > > for a changelog. I think I prefer a wording like "ignore the initializer" 
> > > or
> > > another less idiomatic expression. And I think a ';' before the second 
> > > 'if'
> > > also increases readability.
> >
> > Can there be side-effects in those initializer elements in Fortran?
>
> For PARAMETERs certainly not, those need to be constant.
> Even otherwise, this is in a routine that does
>   /* Create a constructor from the list of elements.  */
>   tmp = build_constructor (type, v);
>   TREE_CONSTANT (tmp) = 1;
>   return tmp;
> at the end so I wouldn't expect side-effects anywhere.

Ah, didn't see that.

> Also, I think typically in the Fortran FE side-effects would go into
> se.pre and se.post sequences, not into se.expr, and this routine
> doesn't emit those se.pre/se.post sequences anywhere, so presumably it
> assumes they don't exist.
>
> What is the behavior with a RANGE_EXPR when one has { [0..10] = ++i; },
> is that applying the side-effects 11 times or once ?

11 times is what is documented.

Richard.

>
>
>         Jakub
>

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