> Pete Shinners reported that Distutils doesn't treat the -C option in a > Setup file the same as the makesetup script. He's right, but I don't think > the -C option is useful in makesetup at all! > > The relevant bit of code in makesetup is: > case $arg in > -framework) libs="$libs $arg"; skip=libs; > ;; > -[IDUCfF]*) cpps="$cpps $arg";; > -Xlinker) libs="$libs $arg"; skip=libs;; > > '-Cfoo' in a Setup file therefore causes -Cfoo to be added to the list > of compiler flags, but at least in GCC, that doesn't mean anything; -C > indicates that the preprocessor shouldn't strip comments, and it > doesn't take an argument. (Anyone know what -C does in other > compilers?) I believe that "don't skip comments" is the traditional meaning. The makesetup script is technically doing the right thing here -- $arg will contain the string "-C" if -C is used correctly, so it will add "-C" to the list of preprocessor options (which are later passed to the C compiler). If you want to be strict and disallow -Cfoo, you could change it to -[IDUfF]*) cpps="$cpps $arg";; -C) cpps="$cpps $arg";; but I'm not sure I see the point. > Because of this, I think -C in makesetup has been useless since > revision 1.1 of makesetup (which is 1994 -- Python 1.0.0), so I doubt > anyone has ever used it. Distutils should do something useful with > it, and IMHO that would be to make '-C cpparg' add 'cpparg' to the > compiler's arguments. Thoughts? Should makesetup be fixed to match? I agree that there's little use for -C, but I don't think makesetup is incorrect. I don't understand what you want it to do in Distutils: above, you say that "-C" doesn't take an argument, so why would you want "-C cpparg" to add "cpparg" to the compiler arguments? Is that because you need a way to transparently pass compiler arguments, and the C in -C can stand for compiler??? --Guido van Rossum (home page: http://www.python.org/~guido/)
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