// PR c++/20280 // { dg-do compile } // Gimplification of the COND_EXPR used to fail because it had an // addressable type, and create_tmp_var rejected that. struct A { ~A(); }; struct B : A {}; A& foo(); void bar(bool b) { (B&) (b ? foo() : foo()); } // Make sure bit-fields and addressable types don't cause crashes. // These were not in the original bug report. // Added by Alexandre Oliva // Copyright 2005 Free Software Foundation struct X { long i : 32, j, k : 32; }; void g(long&); void h(const long&); void f(X &x, bool b) { (b ? x.i : x.j) = 1; (b ? x.j : x.k) = 2; (b ? x.i : x.k) = 3; (void)(b ? x.i : x.j); (void)(b ? x.i : x.k); (void)(b ? x.j : x.k); g (b ? x.i : x.j); // { dg-error "cannot bind bitfield" } g (b ? x.i : x.k); // { dg-error "cannot bind bitfield" } g (b ? x.j : x.k); // { dg-error "cannot bind bitfield" } // It's not entirely clear whether these should be accepted. The // conditional expressions are lvalues for sure, and 8.5.3/5 exempts // lvalues for bit-fields, but it's not clear that conditional // expressions that are lvalues and that have at least one possible // result that is a bit-field lvalue meets this condition. h (b ? x.i : x.j); h (b ? x.i : x.k); h (b ? x.j : x.k); (long &)(b ? x.i : x.j); // { dg-error "address of bit-field" } (long &)(b ? x.i : x.k); // { dg-error "address of bit-field" } (long &)(b ? x.j : x.k); // { dg-error "address of bit-field" } }