First, since */
is not part a comment, it is ignored in translation phase 3, described in C 2011 (n1570) 5.1.1.2 1 3.; the characters simply pass through unchanged.
Thus, in phase 4 (executing preprocessor directives), the compiler sees #endif */
. Per C 2011 (n1570) 6.10 1, the proper syntax for an #endif
directive is:
# endif new-line
That is, it consists of three preprocessing tokens, #
, endif
, and a new-line character, with spaces and tabs allowed between the tokens. So #endif */
is not proper syntax.
5.1.1.3 requires a conforming implementation to produce a diagnostic message if the source violates a syntax rule. So, if a compiler does not produce a warning or error message in this case, it is not conforming.
Some compilers operate by default in a mode that does not conform to the C standard. Your compiler might have switches to change this, such as GCC’s -std=c99
switch. If your compiler does not issue a warning or error message when in a conforming mode, then it is a bug.