I maintain a cross-platform C codebase and on a few platforms (Xcode 4, Red Hat derived distros like Fedora and Mageia), I get the following compiler error:
warning: declaration of 'index' shadows a global declaration
Based on this answer, I understand that this is because some BSD-based C implementations define a non-standard index
function in string.h
which means that this warning shows up whenever I declare an index
variable. I assure you that I do not have any global index
variables.
I know I can avoid naming anything index
but it's a semantically useful name so I end up using it all over the place. I know I can also suppress this warning, for example by using -Wno-shadow
in GCC, but I'd rather not globally disable an otherwise useful compiler warning.
So how can I solve this problem? That is, is it somehow possible to detect if the platform has the index
function and disable the warning there only, or how can I redefine it if it exists?