Subject: Re: man pages & style guide
To: Bruce Albrecht <Bruce.Albrecht@seag.fingerhut.com>
From: Peter Galbavy <peter@wonderland.org>
List: current-users
Date: 03/08/1996 08:31:36
> J.T. Conklin writes:
> > We'd like to make it possible for NetBSD to be compiled with pre-ANSI
> > compilers.
>
> I know this was discussed to death a couple of months ago, but... Can
> gcc be compiled with a pre-ANSI compiler? Is it possible to bootstrap
> gcc, and then build the rest? For that matter, how many platforms out
> there still don't have an ANSI compiler available for them? I see
> nothing wrong with backwards-compatibility as long as it's truly
> necessary, but I wonder if it's really necessary anymore.
This is one of those areas where I "quietly" disagree with JTC (and
others etc...) and think that the ANSI environment brings such
benefits to the developer in terms of prototyping, type standards
etc that it should be considered a requirement for coding in C
nowadays. It is not (as some people see it) a lazy programmers safety
net. A wise programmer uses a safety net, some ropes, a harness and then
makes sure they are doing the high wire 6 inches above solid, earthquake
free ground. With a good life insurance policy too.
For our internal use I have been reworking large parts of gated, and one
of the "style" assumptions that I have made is that if the thing is not
built in a ANSI C (and slightly - mostly - POSIX like) environment then
you do not want to be running the software on that platform.
I would like to see *BSD move towards trashing the __P() macros,
declaring functions ANSI style and generally making sure that the code
(at least under GNU C) compiles without warning or "areas of doubt".
Regards,
--
Peter Galbavy peter@wonderland.org
@ Home phone://44/973/499465
in Wonderland http://www.wonderland.org/~peter/
snail://UK/NW1_6LE/London/21_Harewood_Avenue/