forked from OSchip/llvm-project
![]() r280553 introduced an issue where we'd emit ambiguity errors for code like: ``` void foo(int *, int); void foo(unsigned int *, unsigned int); void callFoo() { unsigned int i; foo(&i, 0); // ambiguous: int->unsigned int is worse than int->int, // but unsigned int*->unsigned int* is better than // int*->int*. } ``` This patch fixes this issue by changing how we handle ill-formed (but valid) implicit conversions. Candidates with said conversions now always rank worse than candidates without them, and two candidates are considered to be equally bad if they both have these conversions for the same argument. Additionally, this fixes a case in C++11 where we'd complain about an ambiguity in a case like: ``` void f(char *, int); void f(const char *, unsigned); void g() { f("abc", 0); } ``` ...Since conversion to char* from a string literal is considered ill-formed in C++11 (and deprecated in C++03), but we accept it as an extension. llvm-svn: 280847 |
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clang | ||
clang-c | ||
CMakeLists.txt |