On Mon, 23 Apr 2001 19:16:29 GMT, "Stephen Hansen" <news at myNOSPAM.org> wrote in comp.lang.python in article <hc%E6.195118$LO3.31059764 at typhoon.we.rr.com>: :Borland is :complaining rather loudly (in the order of 200+ warnings, although some are :for other things I havn't looked into) because of the use of this idiom. I'm :not sugguesting it must be changed, but now that I understand what's going :on, it seems *correct* that this throws a warning. Can't you configure the level of warnings? I don't have a copy of the BCC free compiler, however I have C++ Builder 5, and I find that under the Project>Options>Tasm tab, I can setting warnings to "None" or "Level 1" (mild), or "Level 2" (high). I also use MetroWerks CodeWarrior for writing C++ code, and the warnings are configurable in that compiler as well. (Matter of fact, they are very configurable...I can toggle each of the following on/off as to whether I would like to receive warnings on them, or not: Illegal Pragmas, Empty Declarations, Possible Errors, Unused Variables, Unused Arguments, Extra Commas, Extended Error Checking, Hidden Virtual Functions, Implicit Arithmetic Conversions, Non-Inlined Functions, Inconsistent Use of "class" and "struct" Keywords.) Again, these are Project settings. Have to customize per project. -- Sheila King http://www.thinkspot.net/sheila/ http://www.k12groups.org/
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