For this code
struct test {};
test f() { return test(); }
void print(test *x) {}
int main()
{
print(&f());
print(&test());
}
gcc-4.6 emits two "taking address of temporary [-fpermissive]" errors. This was introduced in 4.6, gcc-4.5 could compile it.
The reason is pretty clear and well documented. The problem is that it is a legacy code and, to compile, we have to make it work, thus, doing #pragmas around files and/or parts of code to compile them with -fpermissive. Let's say, customers are adamant not to modify the existing code (i.e. the fact of calling print() with &f() or &test() cannot be changed, not source files in general). In other words, one way or another this will be compiled, the only choice is more or less pain.
So the question is - are there any possible workarounds to make it work without doing -fpermissive in lots of places? -W flags, C++ tricks, etc.
&test()to work. You have to change something about the callsite or the return type off()to get around the problem. – GManNickG Jul 23 '12 at 18:38