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<h1>Expressive Diagnostics</h1>
<p>In addition to being fast and functional, we aim to make Clang extremely user
friendly. As far as a command-line compiler goes, this basically boils down to
making the diagnostics (error and warning messages) generated by the compiler
be as useful as possible. There are several ways that we do this. This section
talks about the experience provided by the command line compiler, contrasting
Clang output to GCC 4.9's output in some cases.
</p>
<h2>Column Numbers and Caret Diagnostics</h2>
<p>First, all diagnostics produced by clang include full column number
information. The clang command-line compiler driver uses this information
to print "point diagnostics".
(IDEs can use the information to display in-line error markup.)
This is nice because it makes it very easy to understand exactly
what is wrong in a particular piece of code.</p>
<p>The point (the green "^" character) exactly shows where the problem is, even
inside of a string. This makes it really easy to jump to the problem and
helps when multiple instances of the same character occur on a line. (We'll
revisit this more in following examples.)</p>
<pre>
$ <span class="cmd">clang -fsyntax-only format-strings.c</span>
<span class="loc">format-strings.c:91:13:</span> <span class="warn">warning:</span> <span class="msg">'.*' specified field precision is missing a matching 'int' argument</span>
<span class="snip" > printf("%.*d");</span>
<span class="point"> ^</span>
</pre>
<p>Note that modern versions of GCC have followed Clang's lead, and are
now able to give a column for a diagnostic, and include a snippet of source
text in the result. However, Clang's column number is much more accurate,
pointing at the problematic format specifier, rather than the <tt>)</tt>
character the parser had reached when the problem was detected.
Also, Clang's diagnostic is colored by default, making it easier to
distinguish from nearby text.</p>
<h2>Range Highlighting for Related Text</h2>
<p>Clang captures and accurately tracks range information for expressions,
statements, and other constructs in your program and uses this to make
diagnostics highlight related information. In the following somewhat
nonsensical example you can see that you don't even need to see the original source code to
understand what is wrong based on the Clang error. Because clang prints a
point, you know exactly <em>which</em> plus it is complaining about. The range
information highlights the left and right side of the plus which makes it
immediately obvious what the compiler is talking about.
Range information is very useful for
cases involving precedence issues and many other cases.</p>
<pre>
$ <span class="cmd">gcc-4.9 -fsyntax-only t.c</span>
t.c: In function 'int f(int, int)':
t.c:7:39: error: invalid operands to binary + (have 'int' and 'struct A')
return y + func(y ? ((SomeA.X + 40) + SomeA) / 42 + SomeA.X : SomeA.X);
^
$ <span class="cmd">clang -fsyntax-only t.c</span>
<span class="loc">t.c:7:39:</span> <span class="err">error:</span> <span class="msg">invalid operands to binary expression ('int' and 'struct A')</span>
<span class="snip" > return y + func(y ? ((SomeA.X + 40) + SomeA) / 42 + SomeA.X : SomeA.X);</span>
<span class="point"> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ^ ~~~~~</span>
</pre>
<h2>Precision in Wording</h2>
<p>A detail is that we have tried really hard to make the diagnostics that come
out of clang contain exactly the pertinent information about what is wrong and
why. In the example above, we tell you what the inferred types are for
the left and right hand sides, and we don't repeat what is obvious from the
point (e.g., that this is a "binary +").</p>
<p>Many other examples abound. In the following example, not only do we tell you
that there is a problem with the <tt>*</tt>
and point to it, we say exactly why and tell you what the type is (in case it is
a complicated subexpression, such as a call to an overloaded function). This
sort of attention to detail makes it much easier to understand and fix problems
quickly.</p>
<pre>
$ <span class="cmd">gcc-4.9 -fsyntax-only t.c</span>
t.c:5:11: error: invalid type argument of unary '*' (have 'int')
return *SomeA.X;
^
$ <span class="cmd">clang -fsyntax-only t.c</span>
<span class="loc">t.c:5:11:</span> <span class="err">error:</span> <span class="msg">indirection requires pointer operand ('int' invalid)</span>
<span class="snip" > int y = *SomeA.X;</span>
<span class="point"> ^~~~~~~~</span>
</pre>
<h2>Typedef Preservation and Selective Unwrapping</h2>
<p>Many programmers use high-level user defined types, typedefs, and other
syntactic sugar to refer to types in their program. This is useful because they
can abbreviate otherwise very long types and it is useful to preserve the
typename in diagnostics. However, sometimes very simple typedefs can wrap
trivial types and it is important to strip off the typedef to understand what
is going on. Clang aims to handle both cases well.<p>
<p>The following example shows where it is important to preserve
a typedef in C.</p>
<pre>
$ <span class="cmd">clang -fsyntax-only t.c</span>
<span class="loc">t.c:15:11:</span> <span class="err">error:</span> <span class="msg">can't convert between vector values of different size ('__m128' and 'int const *')</span>
<span class="snip"> myvec[1]/P;</span>
<span class="point"> ~~~~~~~~^~</span>
</pre>
<p>The following example shows where it is useful for the compiler to expose
underlying details of a typedef. If the user was somehow confused about how the
system "pid_t" typedef is defined, Clang helpfully displays it with "aka".</p>
<pre>
$ <span class="cmd">clang -fsyntax-only t.c</span>
<span class="loc">t.c:13:9:</span> <span class="err">error:</span> <span class="msg">member reference base type 'pid_t' (aka 'int') is not a structure or union</span>
<span class="snip"> myvar = myvar.x;</span>
<span class="point"> ~~~~~ ^</span>
</pre>
<p>In C++, type preservation includes retaining any qualification written into type names. For example, if we take a small snippet of code such as:
<blockquote>
<pre>
namespace services {
struct WebService { };
}
namespace myapp {
namespace servers {
struct Server { };
}
}
using namespace myapp;
void addHTTPService(servers::Server const &server, ::services::WebService const *http) {
server += http;
}
</pre>
</blockquote>
<p>and then compile it, we see that Clang is both providing accurate information and is retaining the types as written by the user (e.g., "servers::Server", "::services::WebService"):
<pre>
$ <span class="cmd">clang -fsyntax-only t.cpp</span>
<span class="loc">t.cpp:9:10:</span> <span class="err">error:</span> <span class="msg">invalid operands to binary expression ('servers::Server const' and '::services::WebService const *')</span>
<span class="snip">server += http;</span>
<span class="point">~~~~~~ ^ ~~~~</span>
</pre>
<p>Naturally, type preservation extends to uses of templates, and Clang retains information about how a particular template specialization (like <code>std::vector<Real></code>) was spelled within the source code. For example:</p>
<pre>
$ <span class="cmd">clang -fsyntax-only t.cpp</span>
<span class="loc">t.cpp:12:7:</span> <span class="err">error:</span> <span class="msg">incompatible type assigning 'vector<Real>', expected 'std::string' (aka 'class std::basic_string<char>')</span>
<span class="snip">str = vec</span>;
<span class="point">^ ~~~</span>
</pre>
<h2>Fix-it Hints</h2>
<p>"Fix-it" hints provide advice for fixing small, localized problems
in source code. When Clang produces a diagnostic about a particular
problem that it can work around (e.g., non-standard or redundant
syntax, missing keywords, common mistakes, etc.), it may also provide
specific guidance in the form of a code transformation to correct the
problem. In the following example, Clang warns about the use of a GCC
extension that has been considered obsolete since 1993. The underlined
code should be removed, then replaced with the code below the
point line (".x =" or ".y =", respectively).</p>
<pre>
$ <span class="cmd">clang t.c</span>
<span class="loc">t.c:5:28:</span> <span class="warn">warning:</span> <span class="msg">use of GNU old-style field designator extension</span>
<span class="snip">struct point origin = { x: 0.0, y: 0.0 };</span>
<span class="err">~~</span> <span class="msg"><span class="point">^</span></span>
<span class="snip">.x = </span>
<span class="loc">t.c:5:36:</span> <span class="warn">warning:</span> <span class="msg">use of GNU old-style field designator extension</span>
<span class="snip">struct point origin = { x: 0.0, y: 0.0 };</span>
<span class="err">~~</span> <span class="msg"><span class="point">^</span></span>
<span class="snip">.y = </span>
</pre>
<p>"Fix-it" hints are most useful for
working around common user errors and misconceptions. For example, C++ users
commonly forget the syntax for explicit specialization of class templates,
as in the error in the following example. Again, after describing the problem,
Clang provides the fix--add <code>template<></code>--as part of the
diagnostic.<p>
<pre>
$ <span class="cmd">clang t.cpp</span>
<span class="loc">t.cpp:9:3:</span> <span class="err">error:</span> <span class="msg">template specialization requires 'template<>'</span>
struct iterator_traits<file_iterator> {
<span class="point">^</span>
<span class="snip">template<> </span>
</pre>
<h2>Template Type Diffing</h2>
<p>Templates types can be long and difficult to read. More so when part of an
error message. Instead of just printing out the type name, Clang has enough
information to remove the common elements and highlight the differences. To
show the template structure more clearly, the templated type can also be
printed as an indented text tree.</p>
Default: template diff with type elision
<pre>
<span class="loc">t.cc:4:5:</span> <span class="note">note:</span> candidate function not viable: no known conversion from 'vector<map<[...], <span class="template-highlight">float</span>>>' to 'vector<map<[...], <span class="template-highlight">double</span>>>' for 1st argument;
</pre>
-fno-elide-type: template diff without elision
<pre>
<span class="loc">t.cc:4:5:</span> <span class="note">note:</span> candidate function not viable: no known conversion from 'vector<map<int, <span class="template-highlight">float</span>>>' to 'vector<map<int, <span class="template-highlight">double</span>>>' for 1st argument;
</pre>
-fdiagnostics-show-template-tree: template tree printing with elision
<pre>
<span class="loc">t.cc:4:5:</span> <span class="note">note:</span> candidate function not viable: no known conversion for 1st argument;
vector<
map<
[...],
[<span class="template-highlight">float</span> != <span class="template-highlight">double</span>]>>
</pre>
-fdiagnostics-show-template-tree -fno-elide-type: template tree printing with no elision
<pre>
<span class="loc">t.cc:4:5:</span> <span class="note">note:</span> candidate function not viable: no known conversion for 1st argument;
vector<
map<
int,
[<span class="template-highlight">float</span> != <span class="template-highlight">double</span>]>>
</pre>
<h2>Automatic Macro Expansion</h2>
<p>Many errors happen in macros that are sometimes deeply nested. With
traditional compilers, you need to dig deep into the definition of the macro to
understand how you got into trouble. The following simple example shows how
Clang helps you out by automatically printing instantiation information and
nested range information for diagnostics as they are instantiated through macros
and also shows how some of the other pieces work in a bigger example.</p>
<pre>
$ <span class="cmd">clang -fsyntax-only t.c</span>
<span class="loc">t.c:80:3:</span> <span class="err">error:</span> <span class="msg">invalid operands to binary expression ('typeof(P)' (aka 'struct mystruct') and 'typeof(F)' (aka 'float'))</span>
<span class="snip"> X = MYMAX(P, F);</span>
<span class="point"> ^~~~~~~~~~~</span>
<span class="loc">t.c:76:94:</span> <span class="note">note:</span> expanded from:
<span class="snip">#define MYMAX(A,B) __extension__ ({ __typeof__(A) __a = (A); __typeof__(B) __b = (B); __a < __b ? __b : __a; })</span>
<span class="point"> ~~~ ^ ~~~</span>
</pre>
<p>Here's another real world warning that occurs in the "window" Unix package (which
implements the "wwopen" class of APIs):</p>
<pre>
$ <span class="cmd">clang -fsyntax-only t.c</span>
<span class="loc">t.c:22:2:</span> <span class="warn">warning:</span> <span class="msg">type specifier missing, defaults to 'int'</span>
<span class="snip"> ILPAD();</span>
<span class="point"> ^</span>
<span class="loc">t.c:17:17:</span> <span class="note">note:</span> expanded from:
<span class="snip">#define ILPAD() PAD((NROW - tt.tt_row) * 10) /* 1 ms per char */</span>
<span class="point"> ^</span>
<span class="loc">t.c:14:2:</span> <span class="note">note:</span> expanded from:
<span class="snip"> register i; \</span>
<span class="point"> ^</span>
</pre>
<p>In practice, we've found that Clang's treatment of macros is actually more useful in multiply nested
macros than in simple ones.</p>
<h2>Quality of Implementation and Attention to Detail</h2>
<p>Finally, we have put a lot of work polishing the little things, because
little things add up over time and contribute to a great user experience.</p>
<p>The following example shows that we recover from the simple case of
forgetting a ; after a struct definition much better than GCC.</p>
<pre>
$ <span class="cmd">cat t.cc</span>
template<class T>
class a {};
struct b {}
a<int> c;
$ <span class="cmd">gcc-4.9 t.cc</span>
t.cc:4:8: error: invalid declarator before 'c'
a<int> c;
^
$ <span class="cmd">clang t.cc</span>
<span class="loc">t.cc:3:12:</span> <span class="err">error:</span> <span class="msg">expected ';' after struct</span>
<span class="snip" >struct b {}</span>
<span class="point"> ^</span>
<span class="point"> ;</span>
</pre>
<p>The following example shows that we diagnose and recover from a missing
<tt>typename</tt> keyword well, even in complex circumstances where GCC
cannot cope.</p>
<pre>
$ <span class="cmd">cat t.cc</span>
template<class T> void f(T::type) { }
struct A { };
void g()
{
A a;
f<A>(a);
}
$ <span class="cmd">gcc-4.9 t.cc</span>
t.cc:1:33: error: variable or field 'f' declared void
template<class T> void f(T::type) { }
^
t.cc: In function 'void g()':
t.cc:6:5: error: 'f' was not declared in this scope
f<A>(a);
^
t.cc:6:8: error: expected primary-expression before '>' token
f<A>(a);
^
$ <span class="cmd">clang t.cc</span>
<span class="loc">t.cc:1:26:</span> <span class="err">error:</span> <span class="msg">missing 'typename' prior to dependent type name 'T::type'</span>
<span class="snip" >template<class T> void f(T::type) { }</span>
<span class="point"> ^~~~~~~</span>
<span class="point"> typename </span>
<span class="loc">t.cc:6:5:</span> <span class="err">error:</span> <span class="msg">no matching function for call to 'f'</span>
<span class="snip" > f<A>(a);</span>
<span class="point"> ^~~~</span>
<span class="loc">t.cc:1:24:</span> <span class="note">note:</span> <span class="msg">candidate template ignored: substitution failure [with T = A]: no type named 'type' in 'A'</span>
<span class="snip" >template<class T> void f(T::type) { }</span>
<span class="point"> ^ ~~~~</span>
</pre>
<p>While each of these details is minor, we feel that they all add up to provide
a much more polished experience.</p>
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