[SG10] How closely should our recommendation match clang?
Nelson, Clark
clark.nelson at intel.com
Fri Jan 25 01:40:36 CET 2013
We can't ignore clang, as it is the only popular implementation that has done anything systematic about language feature-testing. But what clang has already done about C++11 (i.e. the past) isn't directly applicable to the future; it's only a model. On the other hand, it's very instructive, especially as regards granularity.
To me, the most obvious question is whether testing for the presence of a feature should use a function-like syntax, or just an identifier. From a programming perspective, there's no practical difference between these two alternatives:
__has_feature(cxx_alignas)
__has_feature_cxx_alignas
On the other hand, if the function-like syntax is used to test for a feature, somehow there has to be a definition of the function-like macro, or simply testing for the feature is likely to be an error. That would either limit the usefulness of feature-testing, or require users to add boilerplate to conditionally define the function-like macro.
--
Clark Nelson Vice chair, PL22.16 (ANSI C++ standard committee)
Intel Corporation Chair, SG10 (WG21 study group for feature-testing)
clark.nelson at intel.com
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