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asm与__asm__

2012年03月25日 ⁄ 综合 ⁄ 共 1210字 ⁄ 字号 评论关闭

Occasionally a valid ANSI/ISO program may be incompatible with the extensions in GNU C. To deal with this situation, the compiler option -ansi disables those GNU extensions which are in conflict with the ANSI/ISO standard. On systems using the GNU C Library (glibc) it also disables extensions to the C standard library. This allows programs written for ANSI/ISO C to be compiled without any unwanted effects from GNU extensions.

For example, here is a valid ANSI/ISO C program which uses a variable called asm:

#include <stdio.h>

int
main (void)
{
  const char asm[] = "6502";
  printf ("the string asm is '%s'\n", asm);
  return 0;
}

The variable name asm is valid under the ANSI/ISO standard, but this program will not compile in GNU C because asm is a GNU C keyword extension (it allows native assembly instructions to be used in C functions). Consequently, it cannot be used as a variable name without giving a compilation error:

$ gcc -Wall ansi.c
ansi.c: In function `main':
ansi.c:6: parse error before `asm'
ansi.c:7: parse error before `asm'

In contrast, using the -ansi option disables the asm keyword extension, and allows the program above to be compiled correctly:

$ gcc -Wall -ansi ansi.c
$ ./a.out 
the string asm is '6502'

For reference, the non-standard keywords and macros defined by the GNU C extensions are asm, inline, typeof, unix and vax. More details can be found in the GCC Reference Manual "Using GCC" (see section Further reading).

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