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Set C standard in Qt Creator

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  • fcarneyF fcarney

    Perhaps this might explain it:
    https://stackoverflow.com/questions/2223541/why-cant-i-use-style-comments-in-my-c-code

    Its funny, in Google search if you put in -std=c89 it will try and eliminate std=c89 from the search results. So search on std=c89 yielded better results.

    aha_1980A Offline
    aha_1980A Offline
    aha_1980
    Lifetime Qt Champion
    wrote on last edited by
    #4

    @fcarney

    Its funny, in Google search if you put in -std=c89 it will try and eliminate std=c89 from the search results. So search on std=c89 yielded better results.

    Thats because minus is the logical not in Google, and has been forever ;)

    Qt has to stay free or it will die.

    fcarneyF 1 Reply Last reply
    3
    • aha_1980A aha_1980

      @fcarney

      Its funny, in Google search if you put in -std=c89 it will try and eliminate std=c89 from the search results. So search on std=c89 yielded better results.

      Thats because minus is the logical not in Google, and has been forever ;)

      fcarneyF Offline
      fcarneyF Offline
      fcarney
      wrote on last edited by
      #5

      @aha_1980 said in Set C standard in Qt Creator:

      Thats because minus is the logical not in Google, and has been forever ;)

      Yeah, I had forgotten the "good old days" of +/- and using quotes and things to help narrow searches. I remember when searching used to be an art. Maybe it still is.

      C++ is a perfectly valid school of magic.

      aha_1980A 1 Reply Last reply
      1
      • fcarneyF fcarney

        @aha_1980 said in Set C standard in Qt Creator:

        Thats because minus is the logical not in Google, and has been forever ;)

        Yeah, I had forgotten the "good old days" of +/- and using quotes and things to help narrow searches. I remember when searching used to be an art. Maybe it still is.

        aha_1980A Offline
        aha_1980A Offline
        aha_1980
        Lifetime Qt Champion
        wrote on last edited by
        #6

        @fcarney said in Set C standard in Qt Creator:

        I remember when searching used to be an art. Maybe it still is.

        +1

        Qt has to stay free or it will die.

        1 Reply Last reply
        0
        • B Offline
          B Offline
          Bremenpl
          wrote on last edited by
          #7

          @aha_1980 Hi, thanks for answer.
          The intended OS is both Windows (mingw C compiler) and Linux (GCC). Qt version is 5.11.1.

          Here is the compiler output:

          gcc -c -fno-keep-inline-dllexport -std=c89 -g -Wall -W -Wextra -DUNICODE -D_UNICODE -DWIN32 -DNTM_LIB_LIBRARY -DQT_DEPRECATED_WARNINGS -DQT_QML_DEBUG -I..\ntm\trunk\libntm -I. -I..\..\..\..\Qt\5.11.1\mingw53_32\mkspecs\win32-g++ -o debug\calc.o ..\ntm\trunk\libntm\calc\calc.c
          

          lprzenioslo.zut.edu.pl

          aha_1980A 1 Reply Last reply
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          • B Bremenpl

            @aha_1980 Hi, thanks for answer.
            The intended OS is both Windows (mingw C compiler) and Linux (GCC). Qt version is 5.11.1.

            Here is the compiler output:

            gcc -c -fno-keep-inline-dllexport -std=c89 -g -Wall -W -Wextra -DUNICODE -D_UNICODE -DWIN32 -DNTM_LIB_LIBRARY -DQT_DEPRECATED_WARNINGS -DQT_QML_DEBUG -I..\ntm\trunk\libntm -I. -I..\..\..\..\Qt\5.11.1\mingw53_32\mkspecs\win32-g++ -o debug\calc.o ..\ntm\trunk\libntm\calc\calc.c
            
            aha_1980A Offline
            aha_1980A Offline
            aha_1980
            Lifetime Qt Champion
            wrote on last edited by
            #8

            @Bremenpl A short search gave https://stackoverflow.com/questions/2270899/c89-vs-c99-gcc-compiler

            which states:

            In theory, there should be one difference. Using "//" to demark a comment isn't part of C89, so if it enforced the C89 rules correctly, that would produce a compiler error (with -ansi -pedantic, it might do that, but I don't remember for sure).

            Looks like the explanation for your problem.

            Qt has to stay free or it will die.

            B 1 Reply Last reply
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            • aha_1980A aha_1980

              @Bremenpl A short search gave https://stackoverflow.com/questions/2270899/c89-vs-c99-gcc-compiler

              which states:

              In theory, there should be one difference. Using "//" to demark a comment isn't part of C89, so if it enforced the C89 rules correctly, that would produce a compiler error (with -ansi -pedantic, it might do that, but I don't remember for sure).

              Looks like the explanation for your problem.

              B Offline
              B Offline
              Bremenpl
              wrote on last edited by
              #9

              @aha_1980 I think you guys misunderstood me, or I didn't state the question properly.
              I am OK with the fact that // comments are not allowed in C89. Futhermore, I want to use the C89 standard in this project. The thing is, I dont know how to instruct the Qt creator, using the *.pro file, to use C89 for compiling. And I know that it doesnt work, since I am able to do // comments and for loops with initialization.

              lprzenioslo.zut.edu.pl

              1 Reply Last reply
              0
              • Christian EhrlicherC Online
                Christian EhrlicherC Online
                Christian Ehrlicher
                Lifetime Qt Champion
                wrote on last edited by
                #10

                @Bremenpl said in Set C standard in Qt Creator:

                -std=c89

                If this is in the compiler output as you wrote above then qtcreator / qmake isn't the one to blame.

                Qt Online Installer direct download: https://download.qt.io/official_releases/online_installers/
                Visit the Qt Academy at https://academy.qt.io/catalog

                1 Reply Last reply
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                • fcarneyF Offline
                  fcarneyF Offline
                  fcarney
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #11

                  I just tried this with Qt 5.12.0, gcc, Linux and a standard C project through Qt Creator.
                  I put this in my pro file:

                  QMAKE_CFLAGS += -std=c89
                  

                  So my pro looks like this:

                  TEMPLATE = app
                  CONFIG += console
                  CONFIG -= app_bundle
                  CONFIG -= qt
                  QMAKE_CFLAGS += -std=c89
                  
                  SOURCES += \
                          main.c
                  

                  My C source looks like this:

                  #include <stdio.h>
                  
                  // this is a comment
                  int main()
                  {
                      printf("Hello World!\n");
                      return 0;
                  }
                  

                  This will not compile and throws this error:

                  /home/fcarney/Documents/programming/test/testcstandards/main.c:3: error: C++ style comments are not allowed in ISO C90
                   // this is a comment
                   ^
                  

                  The Qt creator IDE shows this error:

                  /home/fcarney/Documents/programming/test/testcstandards/main.c:3: warning: // comments are not allowed in this language
                  

                  Is it possible your project is a C++ project?
                  What is the extension of your file? .c .cpp ?
                  What compiler are you using? MSVC, gcc, Mingw?

                  C++ is a perfectly valid school of magic.

                  1 Reply Last reply
                  3
                  • fcarneyF Offline
                    fcarneyF Offline
                    fcarney
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #12

                    I just repeated the test on Windows 10 Pro, Mingw64, Qt 5.12.1 with an similarly generated C project. I get the same result as the Linux test.

                    C++ is a perfectly valid school of magic.

                    B 1 Reply Last reply
                    1
                    • fcarneyF fcarney

                      I just repeated the test on Windows 10 Pro, Mingw64, Qt 5.12.1 with an similarly generated C project. I get the same result as the Linux test.

                      B Offline
                      B Offline
                      Bremenpl
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #13

                      @fcarney Thanks for answer, I rewrote the *.pro file carefully and it indeed works now. Had to had some faulty flags maybe. Thank you for help.

                      As a side note, is it even possible to create a plain C (not C++) project in Qt creator?

                      lprzenioslo.zut.edu.pl

                      1 Reply Last reply
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                      • fcarneyF Offline
                        fcarneyF Offline
                        fcarney
                        wrote on last edited by fcarney
                        #14

                        Yes:
                        File -> New File or Project -> Non-Qt Project -> Plain C Application
                        That is how I created my test project. You will have to add the CFLAG.

                        Edit:
                        Do you mean using Qt widgets and the like? Probably not as all the graphical stuff seems to be heavily C++.

                        C++ is a perfectly valid school of magic.

                        B 1 Reply Last reply
                        4
                        • fcarneyF fcarney

                          Yes:
                          File -> New File or Project -> Non-Qt Project -> Plain C Application
                          That is how I created my test project. You will have to add the CFLAG.

                          Edit:
                          Do you mean using Qt widgets and the like? Probably not as all the graphical stuff seems to be heavily C++.

                          B Offline
                          B Offline
                          Bremenpl
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #15

                          @fcarney Understood, thank you.

                          lprzenioslo.zut.edu.pl

                          1 Reply Last reply
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