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[/] [openrisc/] [trunk/] [gnu-stable/] [gcc-4.5.1/] [gcc/] [c-format.h] - Blame information for rev 843

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1 280 jeremybenn
/* Check calls to formatted I/O functions (-Wformat).
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   Copyright (C) 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000,
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   2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2007, 2008 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
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5
This file is part of GCC.
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7
GCC is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under
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the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free
9
Software Foundation; either version 3, or (at your option) any later
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version.
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GCC is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY
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WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or
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FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.  See the GNU General Public License
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for more details.
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You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
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along with GCC; see the file COPYING3.  If not see
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<http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.  */
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#ifndef GCC_C_FORMAT_H
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#define GCC_C_FORMAT_H
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/* The meaningfully distinct length modifiers for format checking recognized
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   by GCC.  */
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enum format_lengths
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{
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  FMT_LEN_none,
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  FMT_LEN_hh,
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  FMT_LEN_h,
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  FMT_LEN_l,
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  FMT_LEN_ll,
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  FMT_LEN_L,
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  FMT_LEN_z,
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  FMT_LEN_t,
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  FMT_LEN_j,
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  FMT_LEN_H,
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  FMT_LEN_D,
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  FMT_LEN_DD,
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  FMT_LEN_MAX
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};
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/* The standard versions in which various format features appeared.  */
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enum format_std_version
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{
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  STD_C89,
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  STD_C94,
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  STD_C9L, /* C99, but treat as C89 if -Wno-long-long.  */
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  STD_C99,
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  STD_EXT
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};
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/* Flags that may apply to a particular kind of format checked by GCC.  */
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enum
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{
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  /* This format converts arguments of types determined by the
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     format string.  */
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  FMT_FLAG_ARG_CONVERT = 1,
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  /* The scanf allocation 'a' kludge applies to this format kind.  */
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  FMT_FLAG_SCANF_A_KLUDGE = 2,
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  /* A % during parsing a specifier is allowed to be a modified % rather
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     that indicating the format is broken and we are out-of-sync.  */
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  FMT_FLAG_FANCY_PERCENT_OK = 4,
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  /* With $ operand numbers, it is OK to reference the same argument more
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     than once.  */
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  FMT_FLAG_DOLLAR_MULTIPLE = 8,
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  /* This format type uses $ operand numbers (strfmon doesn't).  */
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  FMT_FLAG_USE_DOLLAR = 16,
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  /* Zero width is bad in this type of format (scanf).  */
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  FMT_FLAG_ZERO_WIDTH_BAD = 32,
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  /* Empty precision specification is OK in this type of format (printf).  */
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  FMT_FLAG_EMPTY_PREC_OK = 64,
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  /* Gaps are allowed in the arguments with $ operand numbers if all
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     arguments are pointers (scanf).  */
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  FMT_FLAG_DOLLAR_GAP_POINTER_OK = 128
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  /* Not included here: details of whether width or precision may occur
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     (controlled by width_char and precision_char); details of whether
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     '*' can be used for these (width_type and precision_type); details
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     of whether length modifiers can occur (length_char_specs).  */
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};
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/* Structure describing a length modifier supported in format checking, and
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   possibly a doubled version such as "hh".  */
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typedef struct
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{
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  /* Name of the single-character length modifier. If prefixed by
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     a zero character, it describes a multi character length
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     modifier, like I64, I32, etc.  */
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  const char *name;
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  /* Index into a format_char_info.types array.  */
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  enum format_lengths index;
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  /* Standard version this length appears in.  */
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  enum format_std_version std;
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  /* Same, if the modifier can be repeated, or NULL if it can't.  */
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  const char *double_name;
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  enum format_lengths double_index;
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  enum format_std_version double_std;
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  /* If this flag is set, just scalar width identity is checked, and
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     not the type identity itself.  */
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  int scalar_identity_flag;
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} format_length_info;
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/* Structure describing the combination of a conversion specifier
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   (or a set of specifiers which act identically) and a length modifier.  */
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typedef struct
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{
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  /* The standard version this combination of length and type appeared in.
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     This is only relevant if greater than those for length and type
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     individually; otherwise it is ignored.  */
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  enum format_std_version std;
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  /* The name to use for the type, if different from that generated internally
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     (e.g., "signed size_t").  */
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  const char *name;
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  /* The type itself.  */
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  tree *type;
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} format_type_detail;
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121
 
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/* Macros to fill out tables of these.  */
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#define NOARGUMENTS     { T89_V, BADLEN, BADLEN, BADLEN, BADLEN, BADLEN, BADLEN, BADLEN, BADLEN }
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#define BADLEN  { STD_C89, NULL, NULL }
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#define NOLENGTHS       { BADLEN, BADLEN, BADLEN, BADLEN, BADLEN, BADLEN, BADLEN, BADLEN, BADLEN }
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127
 
128
/* Structure describing a format conversion specifier (or a set of specifiers
129
   which act identically), and the length modifiers used with it.  */
130
typedef struct format_char_info
131
{
132
  const char *format_chars;
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  int pointer_count;
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  enum format_std_version std;
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  /* Types accepted for each length modifier.  */
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  format_type_detail types[FMT_LEN_MAX];
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  /* List of other modifier characters allowed with these specifiers.
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     This lists flags, and additionally "w" for width, "p" for precision
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     (right precision, for strfmon), "#" for left precision (strfmon),
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     "a" for scanf "a" allocation extension (not applicable in C99 mode),
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     "*" for scanf suppression, and "E" and "O" for those strftime
142
     modifiers.  */
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  const char *flag_chars;
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  /* List of additional flags describing these conversion specifiers.
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     "c" for generic character pointers being allowed, "2" for strftime
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     two digit year formats, "3" for strftime formats giving two digit
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     years in some locales, "4" for "2" which becomes "3" with an "E" modifier,
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     "o" if use of strftime "O" is a GNU extension beyond C99,
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     "W" if the argument is a pointer which is dereferenced and written into,
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     "R" if the argument is a pointer which is dereferenced and read from,
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     "i" for printf integer formats where the '0' flag is ignored with
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     precision, and "[" for the starting character of a scanf scanset.  */
153
  const char *flags2;
154
  /* If this format conversion character consumes more than one argument,
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     CHAIN points to information about the next argument.  For later
156
     arguments, only POINTER_COUNT, TYPES, and the "c", "R", and "W" flags
157
     in FLAGS2 are used.  */
158
  const struct format_char_info *chain;
159
} format_char_info;
160
 
161
 
162
/* Structure describing a flag accepted by some kind of format.  */
163
typedef struct
164
{
165
  /* The flag character in question (0 for end of array).  */
166
  int flag_char;
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  /* Zero if this entry describes the flag character in general, or a
168
     nonzero character that may be found in flags2 if it describes the
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     flag when used with certain formats only.  If the latter, only
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     the first such entry found that applies to the current conversion
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     specifier is used; the values of 'name' and 'long_name' it supplies
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     will be used, if non-NULL and the standard version is higher than
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     the unpredicated one, for any pedantic warning.  For example, 'o'
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     for strftime formats (meaning 'O' is an extension over C99).  */
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  int predicate;
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  /* Nonzero if the next character after this flag in the format should
177
     be skipped ('=' in strfmon), zero otherwise.  */
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  int skip_next_char;
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  /* The name to use for this flag in diagnostic messages.  For example,
180
     N_("'0' flag"), N_("field width").  */
181
  const char *name;
182
  /* Long name for this flag in diagnostic messages; currently only used for
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     "ISO C does not support ...".  For example, N_("the 'I' printf flag").  */
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  const char *long_name;
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  /* The standard version in which it appeared.  */
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  enum format_std_version std;
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} format_flag_spec;
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189
 
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/* Structure describing a combination of flags that is bad for some kind
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   of format.  */
192
typedef struct
193
{
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  /* The first flag character in question (0 for end of array).  */
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  int flag_char1;
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  /* The second flag character.  */
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  int flag_char2;
198
  /* Nonzero if the message should say that the first flag is ignored with
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     the second, zero if the combination should simply be objected to.  */
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  int ignored;
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  /* Zero if this entry applies whenever this flag combination occurs,
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     a nonzero character from flags2 if it only applies in some
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     circumstances (e.g. 'i' for printf formats ignoring 0 with precision).  */
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  int predicate;
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} format_flag_pair;
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/* Structure describing a particular kind of format processed by GCC.  */
209
typedef struct
210
{
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  /* The name of this kind of format, for use in diagnostics.  Also
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     the name of the attribute (without preceding and following __).  */
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  const char *name;
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  /* Specifications of the length modifiers accepted; possibly NULL.  */
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  const format_length_info *length_char_specs;
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  /* Details of the conversion specification characters accepted.  */
217
  const format_char_info *conversion_specs;
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  /* String listing the flag characters that are accepted.  */
219
  const char *flag_chars;
220
  /* String listing modifier characters (strftime) accepted.  May be NULL.  */
221
  const char *modifier_chars;
222
  /* Details of the flag characters, including pseudo-flags.  */
223
  const format_flag_spec *flag_specs;
224
  /* Details of bad combinations of flags.  */
225
  const format_flag_pair *bad_flag_pairs;
226
  /* Flags applicable to this kind of format.  */
227
  int flags;
228
  /* Flag character to treat a width as, or 0 if width not used.  */
229
  int width_char;
230
  /* Flag character to treat a left precision (strfmon) as,
231
     or 0 if left precision not used.  */
232
  int left_precision_char;
233
  /* Flag character to treat a precision (for strfmon, right precision) as,
234
     or 0 if precision not used.  */
235
  int precision_char;
236
  /* If a flag character has the effect of suppressing the conversion of
237
     an argument ('*' in scanf), that flag character, otherwise 0.  */
238
  int suppression_char;
239
  /* Flag character to treat a length modifier as (ignored if length
240
     modifiers not used).  Need not be placed in flag_chars for conversion
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     specifiers, but is used to check for bad combinations such as length
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     modifier with assignment suppression in scanf.  */
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  int length_code_char;
244
  /* Assignment-allocation flag character ('m' in scanf), otherwise 0.  */
245
  int alloc_char;
246
  /* Pointer to type of argument expected if '*' is used for a width,
247
     or NULL if '*' not used for widths.  */
248
  tree *width_type;
249
  /* Pointer to type of argument expected if '*' is used for a precision,
250
     or NULL if '*' not used for precisions.  */
251
  tree *precision_type;
252
} format_kind_info;
253
 
254
#define T_I     &integer_type_node
255
#define T89_I   { STD_C89, NULL, T_I }
256
#define T_L     &long_integer_type_node
257
#define T89_L   { STD_C89, NULL, T_L }
258
#define T_LL    &long_long_integer_type_node
259
#define T9L_LL  { STD_C9L, NULL, T_LL }
260
#define TEX_LL  { STD_EXT, NULL, T_LL }
261
#define T_S     &short_integer_type_node
262
#define T89_S   { STD_C89, NULL, T_S }
263
#define T_UI    &unsigned_type_node
264
#define T89_UI  { STD_C89, NULL, T_UI }
265
#define T_UL    &long_unsigned_type_node
266
#define T89_UL  { STD_C89, NULL, T_UL }
267
#define T_ULL   &long_long_unsigned_type_node
268
#define T9L_ULL { STD_C9L, NULL, T_ULL }
269
#define TEX_ULL { STD_EXT, NULL, T_ULL }
270
#define T_US    &short_unsigned_type_node
271
#define T89_US  { STD_C89, NULL, T_US }
272
#define T_F     &float_type_node
273
#define T89_F   { STD_C89, NULL, T_F }
274
#define T99_F   { STD_C99, NULL, T_F }
275
#define T_D     &double_type_node
276
#define T89_D   { STD_C89, NULL, T_D }
277
#define T99_D   { STD_C99, NULL, T_D }
278
#define T_LD    &long_double_type_node
279
#define T89_LD  { STD_C89, NULL, T_LD }
280
#define T99_LD  { STD_C99, NULL, T_LD }
281
#define T_C     &char_type_node
282
#define T89_C   { STD_C89, NULL, T_C }
283
#define T_SC    &signed_char_type_node
284
#define T99_SC  { STD_C99, NULL, T_SC }
285
#define T_UC    &unsigned_char_type_node
286
#define T99_UC  { STD_C99, NULL, T_UC }
287
#define T_V     &void_type_node
288
#define T89_V   { STD_C89, NULL, T_V }
289
#define T_W     &wchar_type_node
290
#define T94_W   { STD_C94, "wchar_t", T_W }
291
#define TEX_W   { STD_EXT, "wchar_t", T_W }
292
#define T_WI    &wint_type_node
293
#define T94_WI  { STD_C94, "wint_t", T_WI }
294
#define TEX_WI  { STD_EXT, "wint_t", T_WI }
295
#define T_ST    &size_type_node
296
#define T99_ST  { STD_C99, "size_t", T_ST }
297
#define T_SST   &signed_size_type_node
298
#define T99_SST { STD_C99, "signed size_t", T_SST }
299
#define T_PD    &ptrdiff_type_node
300
#define T99_PD  { STD_C99, "ptrdiff_t", T_PD }
301
#define T_UPD   &unsigned_ptrdiff_type_node
302
#define T99_UPD { STD_C99, "unsigned ptrdiff_t", T_UPD }
303
#define T_IM    &intmax_type_node
304
#define T99_IM  { STD_C99, "intmax_t", T_IM }
305
#define T_UIM   &uintmax_type_node
306
#define T99_UIM { STD_C99, "uintmax_t", T_UIM }
307
#define T_D32   &dfloat32_type_node
308
#define TEX_D32 { STD_EXT, "_Decimal32", T_D32 }
309
#define T_D64   &dfloat64_type_node
310
#define TEX_D64 { STD_EXT, "_Decimal64", T_D64 }
311
#define T_D128  &dfloat128_type_node
312
#define TEX_D128 { STD_EXT, "_Decimal128", T_D128 }
313
 
314
/* Structure describing how format attributes such as "printf" are
315
   interpreted as "gnu_printf" or "ms_printf" on a particular system.
316
   TARGET_OVERRIDES_FORMAT_ATTRIBUTES is used to specify target-specific
317
   defaults.  */
318
typedef struct
319
{
320
  /* The name of the to be copied format attribute. */
321
  const char *named_attr_src;
322
  /* The name of the to be overridden format attribute. */
323
  const char *named_attr_dst;
324
} target_ovr_attr;
325
 
326
#endif /* GCC_C_FORMAT_H */

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