> From: Neal Gompa <n...@gompa.dev>
> Date: Wed, 10 May 2023 06:56:32 -0400
> Cc: Eric Gallager <eg...@gwmail.gwu.edu>, Jonathan Wakely 
> <jwakely....@gmail.com>, j...@rtems.org, 
>       David Edelsohn <dje....@gmail.com>, Eli Zaretskii <e...@gnu.org>, Jakub 
> Jelinek <ja...@redhat.com>, 
>       Arsen Arsenović <ar...@aarsen.me>, gcc@gcc.gnu.org, 
>       c-std-port...@lists.linux.dev
> 
> On Wed, May 10, 2023 at 6:48 AM Sam James <s...@gentoo.org> wrote:
> >
> > Neal Gompa wasn't keen on the idea at
> > https://lore.kernel.org/c-std-porting/CAEg-Je8=dQo-jAdu=od5dh+h9aqzge_4ghzgx_ow4ryjvpw...@mail.gmail.com/
> > because it'd feel like essentially "repeated punches".
> >
> > Maybe it'd work with some tweaks: I would, however, be more open to GCC 14 
> > having
> > implicit-function-declaration,implicit-int (these are so closely related
> > that it's not worth dividing the two up) and then say, GCC 15 having 
> > int-conversion and maybe
> > incompatible-pointer-types. But spreading it out too much is likely 
> > counterproductive.
> 
> Right, we've been going through a similar effort with C++ over the
> past decade. GCC incrementally becoming more strict on C++ has been an
> incredibly painful experience, and it eats away a ton of time that I
> would have spent dealing with other problems. Having one big event
> where the majority of changes to make the C compiler strict happen
> will honestly make it less painful, even if it doesn't seem like it at
> the moment.

But not having such an event, ever, would be even less painful.

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