Update, see comments:
It doesn't scan the code twice, but it does scan the code in two phases, lexing and parsing.
Consider how the parse of this cline of code works. The lexer reads the source text and breaks it into lexemes, the "smallest components" of the grammar. So when it hits the line
it breaks it up into something like
SYMBOL(c) OPERATOR(+=) DIGIT(1)The parser eventually wants to make this into a parse tree and execute it, but since it's an assignment, before it does, it looks for the name c in the local dictionary, doesn't see it, and inserts it in the dictionary, marking it as uninitialized. In a fullly compiled language, it would just go into the symbol table and wait for the parse, but since it WON'T have the luxury of a second pass, the lexer does a little extra work to make life easier later on. Only, then it sees the OPERATOR, sees that the rules say "if you have an operator += the left hand side must have been initialized" and says "whoops!"
The point here is that it hasn't really started the parse of the line yet. This is all happening sort of preparatory to the actual parse, so the line counter hasn't advanced to the next line. Thus when it signals the error, it still thinks its on the previous line.
As I say, you could argue it's a usability bug, but its actually a fairly common thing. Some compilers are more honest about it and say "error on or around line XXX", but this one doesn't.
