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On 19/01/13 11:28, Lubos Lunak wrote:
 -Wsign-promo is a rather pointless warning these days (the section in the gcc 
manpage is a funny read and not only because it talks about Cfront). I've 
added more overloads to silence it, but I rather wonder why we have this 
explicitly enabled at all.

 My hypothesis is like this:
- the idea behind the warning is just nonsense (who cares to what integer type 
the value is promoted)

overflow for unsigned integral types is defined by the C and C++
standards, while overflow for signed types is explicitly undefined.
some implementations therefore assume that it does not occur and may
remove tests on signed integers from the code that could only evaluate
to true in case of an overflow in order to improve the all-important
SPEC benchmark scores.

-Wsign-promo is specifically about overload resolution, i'm not sure if
that overflow problem would be relevant in this case but this is C++ so
i'm never sure about anything :)

- but it incidentally triggers when passing bool to SvStream, because it 
doesn't have any overload for operator<<(bool), and int is chosen over 
unsigned char AKA sal_Bool , so Caolan added it in 
e8bbb76827dd7a0e30d7d1db34a812a84d85f390
- if SvStream gets overload for bool, the warning can be dumped

 Or am I missing something there?

maybe there are more overloaded identifiers that simply haven't been
called with wrongly promoted parameters yet?



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