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How to remove incorrect warning?

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  • E Engelard
    2 Dec 2018, 23:31

    In new version 5.12 appears much better warning functionality, but how can i remove particular warnings which inappropriate? I fixed all the warnings, but last one i can't fix because it in WinAPI libraries:

    0_1543793467765_sdfkldsffds.jpg

    J Offline
    J Offline
    JKSH
    Moderators
    wrote on 3 Dec 2018, 08:55 last edited by
    #4

    @Engelard said in How to remove incorrect warning?:

    I fixed all the warnings

    👍

    last one i can't fix because it in WinAPI libraries:

    Yes, this warning is caused by winnt.h so you can't fix that one.

    Or this one. arg1 - is digital number from user which i should convert to single byte(unsigned char), toUint is exactly what i needed, to uChar does'nt exist, but it gives me that warning..

    ...

    Or what should i do with such blocks which have alot of binary operations(all of them are correct and works exactly as they should). On screen array of unsigned chars:

    These warn you about implicit conversion. To remove the warning, use static_cast<> to do explicit conversion.

    In new version 5.12 appears much better warning functionality,

    The new features are part of the Clang Code Model: https://blog.qt.io/blog/2018/06/05/qt-creators-clang-code-model/

    how can i remove particular warnings which inappropriate?

    https://stackoverflow.com/questions/51612041/disable-a-specific-warning-in-qtcreator

    Qt Doc Search for browsers: forum.qt.io/topic/35616/web-browser-extension-for-improved-doc-searches

    E 1 Reply Last reply 3 Dec 2018, 09:59
    6
    • J jsulm
      3 Dec 2018, 05:22

      @Engelard These are not incorrect warnings.
      You should fix the issues in your code instead of suppressing warnings.
      If you're converting, for example, int to char you should do it explicitly and think about possible issues.

      E Offline
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      Engelard
      wrote on 3 Dec 2018, 09:44 last edited by
      #5
      This post is deleted!
      1 Reply Last reply
      0
      • J JKSH
        3 Dec 2018, 08:55

        @Engelard said in How to remove incorrect warning?:

        I fixed all the warnings

        👍

        last one i can't fix because it in WinAPI libraries:

        Yes, this warning is caused by winnt.h so you can't fix that one.

        Or this one. arg1 - is digital number from user which i should convert to single byte(unsigned char), toUint is exactly what i needed, to uChar does'nt exist, but it gives me that warning..

        ...

        Or what should i do with such blocks which have alot of binary operations(all of them are correct and works exactly as they should). On screen array of unsigned chars:

        These warn you about implicit conversion. To remove the warning, use static_cast<> to do explicit conversion.

        In new version 5.12 appears much better warning functionality,

        The new features are part of the Clang Code Model: https://blog.qt.io/blog/2018/06/05/qt-creators-clang-code-model/

        how can i remove particular warnings which inappropriate?

        https://stackoverflow.com/questions/51612041/disable-a-specific-warning-in-qtcreator

        E Offline
        E Offline
        Engelard
        wrote on 3 Dec 2018, 09:59 last edited by
        #6

        @JKSH said in How to remove incorrect warning?:

        https://stackoverflow.com/questions/51612041/disable-a-specific-warning-in-qtcreator

        Tnx. But it will remove not particular warning(like first which from WINAPI), but whole kind - use of old-style cast which i don't want to, that warning is useful, and it not worthing remove all of them just because of single mistake of QCreator.

        Topic still actual.

        K 1 Reply Last reply 3 Dec 2018, 10:06
        0
        • E Engelard
          3 Dec 2018, 09:59

          @JKSH said in How to remove incorrect warning?:

          https://stackoverflow.com/questions/51612041/disable-a-specific-warning-in-qtcreator

          Tnx. But it will remove not particular warning(like first which from WINAPI), but whole kind - use of old-style cast which i don't want to, that warning is useful, and it not worthing remove all of them just because of single mistake of QCreator.

          Topic still actual.

          K Offline
          K Offline
          koahnig
          wrote on 3 Dec 2018, 10:06 last edited by
          #7

          @Engelard said in How to remove incorrect warning?:

          @JKSH said in How to remove incorrect warning?:

          https://stackoverflow.com/questions/51612041/disable-a-specific-warning-in-qtcreator

          Tnx. But it will remove not particular warning(like first which from WINAPI), but whole kind - use of old-style cast which i don't want to, that warning is useful, and it not worthing remove all of them just because of single mistake of QCreator.

          Topic still actual.

          Why is this a mistake or error of Qt creator?

          Is the warning completely wrong or is it because of an include, which is not part of Qt?

          Vote the answer(s) that helped you to solve your issue(s)

          E 1 Reply Last reply 3 Dec 2018, 11:04
          3
          • K koahnig
            3 Dec 2018, 10:06

            @Engelard said in How to remove incorrect warning?:

            @JKSH said in How to remove incorrect warning?:

            https://stackoverflow.com/questions/51612041/disable-a-specific-warning-in-qtcreator

            Tnx. But it will remove not particular warning(like first which from WINAPI), but whole kind - use of old-style cast which i don't want to, that warning is useful, and it not worthing remove all of them just because of single mistake of QCreator.

            Topic still actual.

            Why is this a mistake or error of Qt creator?

            Is the warning completely wrong or is it because of an include, which is not part of Qt?

            E Offline
            E Offline
            Engelard
            wrote on 3 Dec 2018, 11:04 last edited by
            #8

            @koahnig said in How to remove incorrect warning?:

            Is the warning completely wrong or is it because of an include, which is not part of Qt?

            Probably because not part of my project i'd say. Warning which user can't fix is wrong warning.

            J 1 Reply Last reply 3 Dec 2018, 11:08
            0
            • E Engelard
              3 Dec 2018, 11:04

              @koahnig said in How to remove incorrect warning?:

              Is the warning completely wrong or is it because of an include, which is not part of Qt?

              Probably because not part of my project i'd say. Warning which user can't fix is wrong warning.

              J Offline
              J Offline
              J.Hilk
              Moderators
              wrote on 3 Dec 2018, 11:08 last edited by
              #9

              @Engelard are you sure the warning doesn't come from your code, where you compare LPDWORD with LPCVOID that seems like an implicit - presumably oldstyle - cast so that a comparison can happen.


              Be aware of the Qt Code of Conduct, when posting : https://forum.qt.io/topic/113070/qt-code-of-conduct


              Q: What's that?
              A: It's blue light.
              Q: What does it do?
              A: It turns blue.

              E 1 Reply Last reply 3 Dec 2018, 11:12
              2
              • J J.Hilk
                3 Dec 2018, 11:08

                @Engelard are you sure the warning doesn't come from your code, where you compare LPDWORD with LPCVOID that seems like an implicit - presumably oldstyle - cast so that a comparison can happen.

                E Offline
                E Offline
                Engelard
                wrote on 3 Dec 2018, 11:12 last edited by Engelard 12 Mar 2018, 11:21
                #10

                @J.Hilk Nope, changed conversion type after your post, still same warn, at least because underscored with yellow exactly WINapi keyword(take a look at screenshot). Plus - it tells that warning exactly because of keyword STILL_ACTIVE

                @JKSH said in How to remove incorrect warning?:

                https://stackoverflow.com/questions/51612041/disable-a-specific-warning-in-qtcreator

                I can't get it, how to remove even whole kind of warnings? For example i want remove "warning: implicit conversion changes signedness:" But can't find anywhere proper code for it. Searched in docs, found macro like -Wpointer-sign (C and Objective-C only) But it seems not working, or it's just macro for another warning type, not for my.

                1 Reply Last reply
                0
                • E Offline
                  E Offline
                  Engelard
                  wrote on 3 Dec 2018, 19:38 last edited by
                  #11

                  I noticed that hint(right-top corner) -Wsign-conversion , added it to my Code Model, but error still exist... what am i doing wrong?

                  K 1 Reply Last reply 3 Dec 2018, 19:41
                  0
                  • E Engelard
                    3 Dec 2018, 19:38

                    I noticed that hint(right-top corner) -Wsign-conversion , added it to my Code Model, but error still exist... what am i doing wrong?

                    K Offline
                    K Offline
                    koahnig
                    wrote on 3 Dec 2018, 19:41 last edited by
                    #12

                    @Engelard

                    -Wno-sign-conversion

                    Vote the answer(s) that helped you to solve your issue(s)

                    E 1 Reply Last reply 3 Dec 2018, 19:46
                    1
                    • K koahnig
                      3 Dec 2018, 19:41

                      @Engelard

                      -Wno-sign-conversion

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                      E Offline
                      Engelard
                      wrote on 3 Dec 2018, 19:46 last edited by
                      #13

                      @koahnig That is it!. Tnx. only one thing left - individually handle that warning from WINAPI...

                      K 1 Reply Last reply 3 Dec 2018, 19:55
                      0
                      • E Engelard
                        3 Dec 2018, 19:46

                        @koahnig That is it!. Tnx. only one thing left - individually handle that warning from WINAPI...

                        K Offline
                        K Offline
                        koahnig
                        wrote on 3 Dec 2018, 19:55 last edited by
                        #14

                        @Engelard

                        It is obvious IMHO that you have to add a "no-" for warnings you do not like from code model as it is -Wsign-conversion.

                        Vote the answer(s) that helped you to solve your issue(s)

                        E 1 Reply Last reply 3 Dec 2018, 20:05
                        0
                        • K koahnig
                          3 Dec 2018, 19:55

                          @Engelard

                          It is obvious IMHO that you have to add a "no-" for warnings you do not like from code model as it is -Wsign-conversion.

                          E Offline
                          E Offline
                          Engelard
                          wrote on 3 Dec 2018, 20:05 last edited by
                          #15

                          @koahnig yep. I guessed that after your example.

                          K 1 Reply Last reply 3 Dec 2018, 20:10
                          0
                          • E Engelard
                            3 Dec 2018, 20:05

                            @koahnig yep. I guessed that after your example.

                            K Offline
                            K Offline
                            kshegunov
                            Moderators
                            wrote on 3 Dec 2018, 20:10 last edited by
                            #16

                            Your code is wrong, so that warning is very useful in fact.

                            if (exitCode != reinterpret_cast<LPCVOID>(...))
                            

                            is nonsense. You can't (or rather shouldn't) cast integers to const void * ...
                            What you should do instead is something like this:

                            if (*exitCode != STILL_ACTIVE) { /* do something */ }
                            

                            reinterpret_cast is the one sure way to blow your leg off while trying to shoot yourself in the foot.

                            Read and abide by the Qt Code of Conduct

                            E 1 Reply Last reply 3 Dec 2018, 20:18
                            2
                            • E Offline
                              E Offline
                              Engelard
                              wrote on 3 Dec 2018, 20:12 last edited by
                              #17
                              This post is deleted!
                              K 1 Reply Last reply 3 Dec 2018, 20:13
                              -1
                              • E Engelard
                                3 Dec 2018, 20:12

                                This post is deleted!

                                K Offline
                                K Offline
                                kshegunov
                                Moderators
                                wrote on 3 Dec 2018, 20:13 last edited by
                                #18

                                I can guarantee you you're never going to enter that branch. You're playing with fire. See my previous comment.

                                Read and abide by the Qt Code of Conduct

                                1 Reply Last reply
                                0
                                • K kshegunov
                                  3 Dec 2018, 20:10

                                  Your code is wrong, so that warning is very useful in fact.

                                  if (exitCode != reinterpret_cast<LPCVOID>(...))
                                  

                                  is nonsense. You can't (or rather shouldn't) cast integers to const void * ...
                                  What you should do instead is something like this:

                                  if (*exitCode != STILL_ACTIVE) { /* do something */ }
                                  

                                  reinterpret_cast is the one sure way to blow your leg off while trying to shoot yourself in the foot.

                                  E Offline
                                  E Offline
                                  Engelard
                                  wrote on 3 Dec 2018, 20:18 last edited by
                                  #19

                                  @kshegunov said in How to remove incorrect warning?:

                                  What you should do instead is something like this:
                                  if (exitCode != STILL_ACTIVE) { / do something */ }

                                  Nope

                                  Will be more warnings(first one actually, no matter what code you'll make, it screaming because of definition inside windows libraries). Your proposal:
                                  0_1543868290472_hhhhh.jpg

                                  K 1 Reply Last reply 3 Dec 2018, 20:23
                                  0
                                  • E Engelard
                                    3 Dec 2018, 20:18

                                    @kshegunov said in How to remove incorrect warning?:

                                    What you should do instead is something like this:
                                    if (exitCode != STILL_ACTIVE) { / do something */ }

                                    Nope

                                    Will be more warnings(first one actually, no matter what code you'll make, it screaming because of definition inside windows libraries). Your proposal:
                                    0_1543868290472_hhhhh.jpg

                                    K Offline
                                    K Offline
                                    kshegunov
                                    Moderators
                                    wrote on 3 Dec 2018, 20:23 last edited by
                                    #20

                                    Don't make me smack you; I've been doing programming all my life.

                                    Firstly, the warning is the least of your problems. You're giving a pointer to uninitialized memory block (i.e. null) as an output parameter. Then you're casting an integer to a memory address?
                                    How it works is as follows:

                                    DWORD exitCode;
                                    GetExitProces(..., &exitCode);
                                    if (exitCode != STILL_ACTIVE)  { /* blabla */ }
                                    

                                    If the warning is the only thing that bothers you, then cast the macro to the proper type explicitly:

                                    if (exitCode != static_cast<DWORD>(STILL_ACTIVE))  { /* more blabla */ }
                                    

                                    Read and abide by the Qt Code of Conduct

                                    E 1 Reply Last reply 3 Dec 2018, 20:37
                                    1
                                    • K kshegunov
                                      3 Dec 2018, 20:23

                                      Don't make me smack you; I've been doing programming all my life.

                                      Firstly, the warning is the least of your problems. You're giving a pointer to uninitialized memory block (i.e. null) as an output parameter. Then you're casting an integer to a memory address?
                                      How it works is as follows:

                                      DWORD exitCode;
                                      GetExitProces(..., &exitCode);
                                      if (exitCode != STILL_ACTIVE)  { /* blabla */ }
                                      

                                      If the warning is the only thing that bothers you, then cast the macro to the proper type explicitly:

                                      if (exitCode != static_cast<DWORD>(STILL_ACTIVE))  { /* more blabla */ }
                                      
                                      E Offline
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                                      Engelard
                                      wrote on 3 Dec 2018, 20:37 last edited by
                                      #21

                                      @kshegunov said in How to remove incorrect warning?:

                                      If the warning is the only thing that bothers you, then cast the macro to the proper type explicitly:
                                      if (exitCode != static_cast<DWORD>(STILL_ACTIVE)) { /* more blabla */ }

                                      1. For last time. Yes, it's just was almost hundred in my app, now 0(if not mention that with STILL_ACTIVE).
                                      2. Your new example of static cast doing nothing, because in definition in win's.h it is already DWORD:

                                      0_1543869432495_stillwarning.jpg

                                      1 Reply Last reply
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                                      • J Offline
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                                        JKSH
                                        Moderators
                                        wrote on 3 Dec 2018, 23:57 last edited by JKSH 12 Apr 2018, 02:03
                                        #22

                                        First, @kshegunov is right -- The "solution" is wrong because LPDWORD is unsigned long *. Your marked "solution" is like this:

                                        unsigned long *exitCode = ...
                                        unsigned long *checkCode = ...
                                        if (exitCode != checkCode) { /*do stuff*/ }
                                        

                                        Do you see the problem with comparing pointers?

                                        Second, @Engelard is right -- The warning exists because of macros in the Windows headers:

                                        // minwinbase.h
                                        #define STILL_ACTIVE     STATUS_PENDING
                                        
                                        // winnt.h
                                        #define STATUS_PENDING   ((DWORD)0x00000103L) // Old-style cast here, not in user code
                                        

                                        There's no way to cast this away in user code.

                                        Qt Doc Search for browsers: forum.qt.io/topic/35616/web-browser-extension-for-improved-doc-searches

                                        E K 2 Replies Last reply 4 Dec 2018, 01:21
                                        2
                                        • J JKSH
                                          3 Dec 2018, 23:57

                                          First, @kshegunov is right -- The "solution" is wrong because LPDWORD is unsigned long *. Your marked "solution" is like this:

                                          unsigned long *exitCode = ...
                                          unsigned long *checkCode = ...
                                          if (exitCode != checkCode) { /*do stuff*/ }
                                          

                                          Do you see the problem with comparing pointers?

                                          Second, @Engelard is right -- The warning exists because of macros in the Windows headers:

                                          // minwinbase.h
                                          #define STILL_ACTIVE     STATUS_PENDING
                                          
                                          // winnt.h
                                          #define STATUS_PENDING   ((DWORD)0x00000103L) // Old-style cast here, not in user code
                                          

                                          There's no way to cast this away in user code.

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                                          Engelard
                                          wrote on 4 Dec 2018, 01:21 last edited by Engelard 12 Apr 2018, 01:22
                                          #23

                                          @JKSH said in How to remove incorrect warning?:

                                          The marked "solution" is like this:

                                          It's not a proper solution.You just changed my example from DWORD pointer (which most proper unsigned int when working with winApi functions) to pointer of quite same type.
                                          My solution with LPDWORD more correct simply because function GetExitCodeProcess demand LPDWORD. There was some reason why guys from microsoft put exactly that type as parameter, not LPVOID or LPCVOID. So i just used that what they recommend. Or they put such types instead simple unsigned ints just for fun?

                                          @JKSH said in How to remove incorrect warning?:

                                          There's no way to cast this away in user code.

                                          Ye. And even such casting i consider as not a solution at all.
                                          Proper solution to whole thing would be - remove single warning(not whole type of that warning, because that value(0x00000103L) even through autoExplicitCast will never cause any error/crush to any kind of app which using such things like predefined variables which never will change it's values.

                                          J K 2 Replies Last reply 4 Dec 2018, 01:56
                                          -1

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