I am using gcc (Ubuntu 4.4.1-4ubuntu9) to compile a program that I'm writing, but it seems to vomit whenever it sees a // comment in my code, saying:
interface.c :##: error: expected expression before â/â token< Does the gcc compile mode I'm using forbid // comments?
$ gcc -g -ansi -pedantic interface.c structs.h -c -I. -I/home/me/project/h Why?
Comments in C Comments can be used to explain code, and to make it more readable. It can also be used to prevent execution when testing alternative code. Comments can be singled-lined or multi-lined.
What is the difference between // comments and /* style comments? The double-slash comments (//) expire at the end of the line. Slash-star (/*) comments are in effect until a closing comment mark (*/).
See C++ comments in GNU compiler documentation.
In GNU C, you may use C++ style comments, which start with
//and continue until the end of the line. Many other C implementations allow such comments, and they are included in the 1999 C standard. However, C++ style comments are not recognized if you specify an-stdoption specifying a version of ISO C beforeC99, or-ansi(equivalent to-std=c89).
(Emphasis is mine because some of the posts claim that // are not allowed in standard C whereas that is only true for pre-99 standards).
// comments are not allowed in old (pre 99) C versions, use /**/ (or remove the -ansi, that is a synonym for the C89 standard)
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