Date: Wed, 10 Jul 2013 20:32:00 +0200 From: "O. Hartmann" <ohartman@zedat.fu-berlin.de> To: David Chisnall <theraven@FreeBSD.org> Cc: FreeBSD CURRENT <freebsd-current@FreeBSD.org>, freebsd-toolchain@FreeBSD.org Subject: Re: CURRENT: CLANG 3.3 and -stad=c++11 and -stdlib=libc++: isnan()/isninf() oddity Message-ID: <20130710203200.5359fd18@thor.walstatt.dyndns.org> In-Reply-To: <C8C94CF2-7D5A-471B-AD63-8E961AED6274@FreeBSD.org> References: <20130710155809.0f589c22@thor.walstatt.dyndns.org> <CD51F125-AE9E-4461-916D-CF583002B47D@FreeBSD.org> <20130710183315.725dfde0@thor.walstatt.dyndns.org> <C8C94CF2-7D5A-471B-AD63-8E961AED6274@FreeBSD.org>
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--Sig_/a3Zxzw.Wnu5iEEcQW081qGU Content-Type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable On Wed, 10 Jul 2013 18:04:16 +0100 David Chisnall <theraven@FreeBSD.org> wrote: > On 10 Jul 2013, at 17:33, "O. Hartmann" <ohartman@zedat.fu-berlin.de> > wrote: >=20 > > Hi David, > >=20 > > thanks for the fast response. > >=20 > > The code I was told to check with is this: > >=20 > > #include <iostream> > > #include <typeinfo> > > #include <cmath> > >=20 > > int > > main(void) > > { > >=20 > > std::cout << typeid(isnan(1.0)).name() << "\n"; > >=20 > > } > >=20 > >=20 > > If I compile it with=20 > >=20 > > c++ -o testme -std=3Dc++11 -stdlib=3Dlibc++ source.cc > >=20 > > and run the binary, the result is "i" which I interpret as "INT". >=20 > I believe there is a bug, which is that the math.h things are being > exposed but shouldn't be, however it is not the bug that you think it > is. Try this line instead: >=20 > std::cout << typeid(std::isnan(1.0)).name() << "\n"; >=20 > We have a libm function, isnan(), and a libc++ function, > std::isnan(). The former is detected if you do not specify a > namespace. I am not sure what will happen if you do: >=20 > #include <iostream> > #include <typeinfo> > #include <cmath> > using namespace std; >=20 > int > main(void) > { >=20 > cout << typeid(isnan(1.0)).name() << "\n"; >=20 > } >=20 > This is considered bad form, but does happen in some code. I am not > certain what the precedence rules are in this case and so I don't > know what happens. >=20 > To properly fix this, we'd need to namespace the libm functions when > including math.h in C++. This would also include fixing tweaking the > macros. =20 >=20 > A fix for your code is to ensure isnan() and isinf() are explicitly > namespaced. Potentially, this may also work: >=20 > using std::isinf; > using std::isnan; >=20 > David >=20 I tried in the test code I provided using=20 #include <iostream> #include <typeinfo> #include <cmath> int main(void) { std::cout << typeid(std::isnan(1.0)).name() << "\n"; } now std::isnan(). The result is the same, it flags "INT". Using=20 #include <iostream> #include <typeinfo> #include <cmath> using namespace std; int main(void) { std::cout << typeid(std::isnan(1.0)).name() << "\n"; } which is considered "bad coding" also results in "INT" (it gives "i"). So, is this woth a PR? Oliver --Sig_/a3Zxzw.Wnu5iEEcQW081qGU Content-Type: application/pgp-signature; name=signature.asc Content-Disposition: attachment; filename=signature.asc -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v2.0.20 (FreeBSD) iQEcBAEBAgAGBQJR3ailAAoJEOgBcD7A/5N86YsH+wZrHf5AyIHKAXV6iWe3FAvK Zlazcyk6Jy8SPyoel0oLr/Ox8oLYw1i6uy1eAZA63EgS7k5LDVHsEDXctn3PMiDN UML3OsqP+e6Ch9Ohkhelk5HIuhqCum4Pt4YGWTKbbEfVj1v4v6NvXscCmlO1CSKn 256QCaX92DQIaKzrdQCotfdgHoUuzPvSwXdHwAslbTKOVBSBmRz0DCZaJvmSx8zt vTqHSvVBApDEUG1JCI4jN8E46GVjNpa2GzzOSwh16tQWR4Dixdo9uM95+FmlkL9D 8egZuGkEwPqjMuxSYe1qMtpP5MrlN6N0SvZL5MCtJ7Qv790/cCbqLG9XNkmf9po= =AzRw -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- --Sig_/a3Zxzw.Wnu5iEEcQW081qGU--
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