/* $NetBSD: msg_161.c,v 1.12 2024/11/13 04:32:49 rillig Exp $ */ # 3 "msg_161.c" // Test for message: constant in conditional context [161] /* lint1-extra-flags: -h -X 351 */ void while_1(void) { /* expect+1: warning: constant in conditional context [161] */ while (1) continue; } void while_0(void) { /* expect+1: warning: constant in conditional context [161] */ while (0) { /* expect+1: warning: 'continue' statement not reached [193] */ continue; } } /* * The pattern 'do { } while (0)' is a common technique to define a * preprocessor macro that behaves like a single statement. There is * nothing unusual or surprising about the constant condition. * Before tree.c 1.202 from 2021-01-31, lint warned about it. */ void do_while_0(void) { do { } while (0); } void do_while_1(void) { do { /* expect+1: warning: constant in conditional context [161] */ } while (1); } extern void println(const char *); /* * Since 2021-02-28, lint no longer warns about constant controlling * expressions involving sizeof since these are completely legitimate. */ void test_sizeof(void) { if (sizeof(int) > sizeof(char)) println("very probable"); if (sizeof(int) < sizeof(char)) println("impossible"); } const _Bool conditions[] = { /* XXX: Why no warning here? */ 13 < 13, /* XXX: Why no warning here? */ 0 < 0, /* XXX: Why no warning here? */ 0 != 0, /* expect+1: warning: constant in conditional context [161] */ 0 == 0 && 1 == 0, /* expect+1: warning: constant in conditional context [161] */ 1 == 0 || 2 == 1, /* expect+2: warning: constant in conditional context [161] */ /* expect+1: error: non-constant initializer [177] */ 0 == 0 && ""[0] == '\0', /* expect+2: warning: constant in conditional context [161] */ /* expect+1: error: non-constant initializer [177] */ ""[0] == '\0' && 0 == 0, /* C99 6.6p3: Constant expressions shall not contain [...] comma */ /* expect+2: warning: expression has null effect [129] */ /* expect+1: error: non-constant initializer [177] */ (0 == 0, 1 == 0), };