> I've been assisting a colleague with their C code, and he has
> learned to add semicolons at the end of statements too well. His
> current favourite mistake is to write
> if (expression == value);
> {
> do_something();
> };
> I frequently miss the trailing semicolon on the first line. So I
> was wondering if it would make sense to modify the C syntax file to
> highlight
> if (expr);
> such that the semicolon shows up as an error. Clearly it is a legal
> null statement, and so is syntactically correct. But if one only
> wanted the expr for its side effects, one would not need to put it
> in an if. To do this because one is only using the else part is
> poor communication with other programmers.
>
> Is there a good reason not to change the syntax file? Otherwise,
> can anyone suggest a patch: my skills in this area are suboptimal,
> as I don't change syntax files very often.
> Thank you
> Hugh
Without using Vim, gcc can give a warning for such dubious code:
$ cat foo.cpp | nl
1 int main(int argc, char **argv)
2 {
3 int a;
4 if (argc == 1);
5 {
6 a = 1;
7 }
8 a = 0;
9 return a;
10 }
$ g++ -Wall -Wempty-body foo.cpp
foo.cpp: In function 'int main(int, char**)':
foo.cpp:4: warning: suggest braces around empty body in an 'if' statement
-- Dominique
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