26

I ran into this while compiling some portable code in gcc. Basically this strange code compiles in Visual studio which really just blows my mind:

class Zebra {int x;};
Zebra goo() {Zebra z; return z;}
void foo(Zebra &x)
{
    Zebra y;
    x = y;
    foo(goo());
}

Visual studio lets this one fly. gcc will catch this as a compile error. Interestingly, If you typedef Zebra to int, VC++ will complain. Quite contradictory behavior. Thoughts?

3
  • 13
    It's not a bug, it's a compiler extension, and an evil one at that.
    – chris
    May 5, 2013 at 2:59
  • 1
    MSVC does have warning C4239: nonstandard extension used, but apparently you have that warning turned off.
    – MSalters
    May 6, 2013 at 9:21
  • 5
    I don't see why you needed to use an infinitely recursing function to demo this.
    – Neutrino
    Nov 24, 2016 at 16:19

2 Answers 2

24

This is old extension to Visual Studio, the only reference I could find on the Microsoft site was this bug report: Temporary Objects Can be Bound to Non-Const References, which has the following example code:

struct A {};

A     f1();
void f2(A&);

int main()
{
    f2(f1()); // This line SHALL trigger an error, but it can be compiled without any     errors or warnings.
}

One of the responses notes:

There is a level 4 warning (level 4 warning are enabled if you pass /W4 to the compiler) for it

This blog post: Visual C++ is so Liberal which covers this extension notes that:

Using Disable Language Extensions (/Za) makes it an error:

10

As others said, this is due to Microsoft C++ extension. Though /Za flag is not recommended as it can break things.

Instead use the /permissive- switch for better standards compliancy and you will get healthy errors for these cases. Note that this flag is available since VS 2017.

The switch /Za does not support certain key Microsoft SDK header files. By contrast /permissive- offers a useful conformance mode where input C++ code is interpreted according to ISO C++ rules but also allows conforming extensions necessary to compile C++ on targets supported by Visual C++.

More info is on Visual C++ Team Blog.

1
  • It's probably worth noted that the /permissive flag is available since VS 2017. You could improve this answer by including the relevant quotes from the article. Like what is does, why was introduced and its relation with /Za
    – bolov
    Oct 23, 2017 at 8:59

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