On Tue, 31 Aug 2010, Andre Majorel wrote: > Yesterday, I spent an hour looking for the C99 and C++0x status > pages in http://gcc.gnu.org/, > > http://gcc.gnu.org/c99status.html > http://gcc.gnu.org/projects/cxx0x.html > > Apparently, the shortest path to the latter is > > "Releases" > -> "GCC 4.5.1" > -> "GCC 4.5.1 Jul 31, 2010 (changes)" > -> "Improved experimental support for the upcoming C++0x" > -> "please see the C++0x in GCC project page" > > Those are among the most useful pages of the site, it makes no > sense to bury them 4+ levels deep.
You're right, these two are really nice and for lack of proper landing pages for the C and C++ languages I went ahead and committed the patch below. Thanks for pointing this out, and sorry for the "slight" delay in getting back to you. Gerald Index: index.html =================================================================== RCS file: /cvs/gcc/wwwdocs/htdocs/index.html,v retrieving revision 1.800 diff -u -r1.800 index.html --- index.html 1 May 2011 21:26:47 -0000 1.800 +++ index.html 9 May 2011 00:30:51 -0000 @@ -15,7 +15,9 @@ <img src="img/gccegg-65.png" alt="" align="right" /> <p>The GNU Compiler Collection includes front ends for -C, C++, Objective-C, <a href="fortran/">Fortran</a>, +<a href="c99status.html">C</a>, +<a href="projects/cxx0x.html">C++</a>, +Objective-C, <a href="fortran/">Fortran</a>, <a href="java/">Java</a>, Ada, and Go, as well as libraries for these languages (<a href="libstdc++/">libstdc++</a>, libgcj,...). GCC was originally written as the compiler for the <a