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gcc
for Syntax Checking-gnats
The s
stands for ’syntax’.
Run GNAT in syntax checking only mode. For example, the command
$ gcc -c -gnats x.adb
compiles file x.adb
in syntax-check-only mode. You can check a
series of files in a single command
, and can use wild cards to specify such a group of files.
Note that you must specify the -c
(compile
only) flag in addition to the -gnats
flag.
You may use other switches in conjunction with -gnats
. In
particular, -gnatl
and -gnatv
are useful to control the
format of any generated error messages.
When the source file is empty or contains only empty lines and/or comments, the output is a warning:
$ gcc -c -gnats -x ada toto.txt toto.txt:1:01: warning: empty file, contains no compilation units $
Otherwise, the output is simply the error messages, if any. No object file or
ALI file is generated by a syntax-only compilation. Also, no units other
than the one specified are accessed. For example, if a unit X
`with's a unit Y
, compiling unit X
in syntax
check only mode does not access the source file containing unit
Y
.
Normally, GNAT allows only a single unit in a source file. However, this
restriction does not apply in syntax-check-only mode, and it is possible
to check a file containing multiple compilation units concatenated
together. This is primarily used by the gnatchop
utility
(Renaming Files with gnatchop).
Next: Using gcc for Semantic Checking, Previous: Run-Time Checks, Up: Compiler Switches [Contents][Index]