The GNU compiler can produce two kinds of diagnostics: errors and warnings. Each kind has a different purpose:
warning:
’ to distinguish them from error messages. Warnings may indicate danger points where you should check to make sure that your program really does what you intend; or the use of obsolete features; or the use of nonstandard features of GNU C or C++. Many warnings are issued only if you ask for them, with one of the -W
options (for instance, -Wall
requests a variety of useful warnings).
GCC always tries to compile your program if possible; it never gratuitously rejects a program whose meaning is clear merely because (for instance) it fails to conform to a standard. In some cases, however, the C and C++ standards specify that certain extensions are forbidden, and a diagnostic must be issued by a conforming compiler. The -pedantic
option tells GCC to issue warnings in such cases; -pedantic-errors
says to make them errors instead. This does not mean that all non-ISO constructs get warnings or errors.
See Options to Request or Suppress Warnings, for more detail on these and related command-line options.
© Free Software Foundation
Licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.3.
https://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc-6.3.0/gcc/Warnings-and-Errors.html