From 8c691c7a43c3d7fe63246221fcc71f334e12eb21 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: David Carlton Date: Fri, 26 Mar 2004 17:05:40 +0000 Subject: 2004-03-26 David Carlton * PROBLEMS: Refer to gdb/1588 instead of gdb/826. --- gdb/PROBLEMS | 17 ++++++++++++----- 1 file changed, 12 insertions(+), 5 deletions(-) (limited to 'gdb/PROBLEMS') diff --git a/gdb/PROBLEMS b/gdb/PROBLEMS index 2c9e030..901b0d2 100644 --- a/gdb/PROBLEMS +++ b/gdb/PROBLEMS @@ -15,11 +15,6 @@ the abortion is displayed only after the command has been completed. *** C++ support -gdb/826: variables in C++ namespaces have to be enclosed in quotes - -When referring to a variable in C++ code that is inside a -namespace, you have to put it inside single quotes. - gdb/931: GDB could be more generous when reading types C++ templates on input When the user types a template, GDB frequently requires the type to be @@ -44,6 +39,18 @@ This applies only to classes where the class type is defined inside a function, not to variables defined with types that are defined somewhere outside any function (which most types are). +gdb/1588: names of c++ nested types in casts must be enclosed in quotes + +You must type + (gdb) print ('Foo::Bar') x +or + (gdb) print ('Foo::Bar' *) y +instead of + (gdb) print (Foo::Bar) x +or + (gdb) print (Foo::Bar *) y +respectively. + gdb/1091: Constructor breakpoints ignored gdb/1193: g++ 3.3 creates multiple constructors: gdb 5.3 can't set breakpoints -- cgit v1.1