vote up 1 vote down star

I'm using GCC 4.3.3 on Ubuntu 9.04 64-bit and was getting errors using C++-style comments in C code. When I say "by default" in the title, I mean simply invoking gcc test.c

According to the GCC 4.3.3 docs (here), this is supported...yet I got the errors anyway.

These errors went away with a simple -std=c99 addition to my compile string, so my problem is solved. Curious if any GCC experts out there had an explanation for this, as it seems to me to be a clear contradiction to the documentation.

#include <stdio.h>
// this is a comment

int main( void )
{
   return 0;
}
flag

Can you post the complete errors? – pmg Nov 1 at 16:58
@pmg error: expected identifier or ‘(’ before ‘/’ token – Kyle Walsh Nov 1 at 17:48
Well '/' is not a C++ style comment character! It should be "\\". So this is a different error altogether. Post the code and the error log (by editing your post not in a further comment). It seems to me that the title of the post may no longer reflect your actual problem. – Clifford Nov 1 at 19:53
1  
@Clifford I'm assuming you made a typo there. You aren't really saying that the line '// this is a comment' (removing the single quotes) would not leave a comment, are you? "\\" is most certainly not how you start comments. – Kyle Walsh Nov 1 at 21:41
@Clifford Re: the titling of the question, I'll make an edit for proper scope. Thanks. – Kyle Walsh Nov 1 at 21:55

3 Answers

vote up 2 vote down check

By defualt GCC is using C89/90 standard with GCC extensions. Strictly speaking by default it is not adhering to any specific standard, since by default it will not issue any diagnostic messages in situations when such messages are required by the standard. You need to run gcc in -ansi -pedantic mode (possibly also -Wall) in order to make it stick to the standard. And in this case you'll have, once again, C89/90.

link|flag
vote up 5 vote down

It's possible Ubuntu is overriding the default, which should be gnu89. Certainly I don't get that with my copy of GCC 4.3 (on Debian).

% echo '// foo' | gcc-4.3 -x c -c -
% echo '// foo' | gcc-4.3 -std=gnu89 -x c -c -    
% echo '// foo' | gcc-4.3 -std=c89 -x c -c -    
<stdin>:1: error: expected identifier or '(' before '/' token
link|flag
vote up 4 vote down

Quote from http://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc/Standards.html#Standards

The default, if no C language dialect options are given, is -std=gnu89

And // comments are recognized by -std=gnu89

link|flag

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

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