How ANSI is TC++?
David Wolverton
daw at cbnewsh.att.com
Sat Nov 3 09:53:13 AEST 1990
In article <131 at nazgul.UUCP>, bright at nazgul.UUCP (Walter Bright) writes:
> A lot of people talk about "100% ANSI C compliance". This is impossible,
> as it implies there are *no* bugs in the compiler. We all know this
> is unattainable (by any known technology!). The best one can say is
> it passes so-and-so's test suite, or was validated by such-and-such
> outfit.
And/or, that the vendor's _intent_ is to produce a 100% ANSI C compiler.
An example is the SVR4 compiler, which, while it probably contains bugs,
is intended to be ANSI compliant. Compare this to, for example,
the THINK C compiler on Macs, which supports some "ANSI features" such
as prototypes, but is not claimed to be an ANSI compiler. Since
marketing droids can influence product claims, one should of course
approach all such claims of intent with a good deal of skepticism.
Dave Wolverton
daw at attunix.att.com
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