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I have a lot of code that is functionally like this:

namespace Foo { namespace Bar { namespace Baz {

class MyType {};

Foo::Bar::Baz::MyType func(Foo::Bar::Baz::MyType const& param);

}}}

Since there aren't any conflicting definitions of MyType, this could be easily simplified like so:

namespace Foo { namespace Bar { namespace Baz {

class MyType {};

MyType func(MyType const& param);

}}}

We've saved (an embarrassing amount) of text space by beginning to delete these sorts of occurrences in our large, expansive codebase. However, it's slow going and error-prone, since we're doing it by vgrep.

Ideally, there would be a compiler warning. Our codebase supports three different compilers (MSVC, g++, and Clang) on three different platforms (Windows, Linux, and Mac), mostly respectively.

I couldn't find a warning to enable that would help us, and it's difficult to Google since people make the class A { void A::method(void) {} }; error a lot (and g++ catches this, since it's not standard-compliant). Our problem is overqualification by namespace, not by type.

So, what warning should I enable in (at least) one of the above compilers? Are there other solutions?

2
  • Three namespaces deep isn't really all that deep, so I'm sure even PCLint is likely to complain about that one... The kinds of 'extra' warnings you can find in Visual C++ are covered here Mar 27, 2015 at 5:02
  • Compiler warnings are generally provided because the code is a potentially causing a bug. The issue here is that there's no way that fully qualifying the name would be a problem, so it's doubtful there would be warning per-se. If it's caught by anything, it would be a style-checker. Mar 27, 2015 at 19:41

1 Answer 1

0

Well, I wrote my own.

I made a repository on github for it, here. It's a refactor/generalize of some older scripts I had for similar code-quality tasks (of lesser complexity).

I originally tried basing it on CPIP, which I found to be a little buggy and much too slow. Instead, the current version is based on a horrifically bletcherous homebrew lexer that's blazing fast (but isn't really a preprocessor). This does lead to a number of limitations and false positives, which are documented.

However, the prototype has been extremely successful for us. We were able to remove all the cruft we missed in a few hours, with false positives (due to the limitations of fake preprocessing) occurring in only 4 files (out of 829).

I hope this helps someone of the future! Check it out!

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