vote up 11 vote down star
2

How universally is the C99 standard supported in today's compilers ? I understand that not even GCC fully supports it. Is this right ?

Which features of C99 are supported more than others, i.e. which can I use to be quite sure that most compilers will understand me ?

Thanks

flag

71% accept rate

6 Answers

vote up 8 vote down check

If you want to write portable C code, then I'd suggest you to write in C89 (old ANSI C standard). This standard is supported by most compilers. If you're looking for C99, then you need Intel C Compiler. It has full C99 support.

GCC supports some new things of C99. They created a table about the status of C99 features. Probably the most usable feature of C99 is the variable length array. Despite the table, you can use them in GCC, however they are implemented in a non-standard way.

Most commercial (like MSVC) compilers are focused on C++, so they won't support C99 in the future neither.

link|flag
By ANSI C, do you mean C89/C90 ? Because ANSI C and ISO C used to be synonymous, but I understand that now ISO C refers to C99 – eliben Sep 26 '08 at 13:30
vote up 0 vote down

The IBM c compiler has c99 support when invoked as c99 but not when invoked as cc or xlc.

link|flag
vote up 5 vote down

Someone mentioned the Intel compiler has C99 support. There is also the Comeau C/C++ compiler which fully supports C99. These are the only ones I'm aware of.

C99 features that I do not use because they are not well supported include:

  • variable length arrays
  • macros with variable number of parameters.

C99 features that I regularly use that seem to be pretty well supported (except by Microsoft):

  • stdint.h
  • snprintf() - MS has a non-standard _snprintf() that has serious limitations of not always null terminating the buffer and not indicating how big the buffer should be

To work around Microsoft's non-support, I use a public domain stdint.h from MinGW (that I modified to also work on VC6) and a nearly public domain snprintf() from Holger Weiss

Items that are not supported by Microsoft, but will still use on other compilers depending on the project include:

  • mixed declarations and code
  • inline functions
  • _Pragma() - this makes pragmas much more usable
link|flag
vote up 2 vote down

Microsoft appear to be tracking C++ standards, but have no support for C99. (They may cherry-pick some features, but could be said to be cherry-picking C++0x where there's an overlap.)

As of Visual Studio .NET 2003, new projects have the 'Compile C code as C++ (/TP)' option enabled by default.

link|flag
vote up 3 vote down

Look at C99 suport status for GNU for details on which features are supported currently.

Sun Studio is purported to support the entire C99 spec. I have never used them, so I can't confirm.

I don't believe the microsoft compiler supports the C99 spec in its entirety. They are much more focused on C++ at the moment

link|flag
vote up 4 vote down

For gcc, there is a table with all supported features. It seems to be that the biggest thing missing are variable-length arrays. Most of the other missing features are library issues rather than language features.

link|flag

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.