New scope checking patch
Jim Blandy
jimb@codesourcery.com
Thu Jan 17 21:58:00 GMT 2008
"Rob Quill" <rob.quill at gmail.com> writes:
> On 17/01/2008, Jim Blandy <jimb@codesourcery.com> wrote:
>> Also, please be sure that the indentation follows the GNU coding
>> conventions. Substatements should be indented by two spaces.
>> (c-exp.y is not a great place to look for examples, since it's a mess,
>> but look at, say, frame.c.)
>>
>> From looking at your patch as it arrived through my mailer, it seemed
>> that the code block for the new $in_scope grammar rule was not
>> indented in the same way as the other blocks. These should all be
>> consistent.
>
> Hey,
>
> Sorry about getting the formatting consistently wrong. I've
> reformatted it and it looks to me like it matches the other cases,
> although it is hard to tell where to use tabs and where to use spaces,
> and I'm never sure it's right as what if I have a different tab size
> to you etc. I tried putting it through indent, but that just made a
> mess, although as a rule is it OK to use that if it is a C file?
I'm told Open Source projects avoid tabs, but it seems that GDB
permits them, with tab stops every 8 columns. The GNU coding
standards don't say much about tab use or width, beyond saying that
error messages that include line and column numbers should assume tab
stops every 8 columns when computing column numbers.
We don't generally use indent; if you look through the mailing list
archives, you can see the arguments. I can only remember the
arguments that made sense to me, so I'm not sure I can accurately
explain the reasoning. :)
If you use GNU Emacs C mode with the default settings, then TAB, C-j,
and C-M-q will do the right thing.
> + if (!have_full_symbols () && !have_partial_symbols ())
> + error ("No symbol table is loaded. Use the \"file\" command.");
Too much indentation?
> +
> + /* Otherwise, prepare to write out the value */
> + int_type = builtin_type (current_gdbarch)->builtin_int;
> + write_exp_elt_opcode (OP_LONG);
> + write_exp_elt_type (int_type);
> +
> + min_symbol =
> + lookup_minimal_symbol (copy_name($3.stoken), NULL, NULL);
> + if ($3.sym || min_symbol)
> + write_exp_elt_longcst ((LONGEST) 1);
> + else
> + write_exp_elt_longcst ((LONGEST) 0);
> +
> + write_exp_elt_opcode (OP_LONG); }
Closing brace should get its own line, since the opening brace did.
> @@ -1678,6 +1704,9 @@ yylex ()
> /* Catch specific keywords. Should be done with a data structure. */
> switch (namelen)
> {
> + case 9:
> + if (strncmp (tokstart, "$in_scope", 9) == 0)
> + return IN_SCOPE;
> case 8:
> if (strncmp (tokstart, "unsigned", 8) == 0)
> return UNSIGNED;
When I view this (again, with 8-column tab stops), the 'case' is not
lined up with the other cases, and the 'return' is not indented two
spaces within the 'if'.
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