http://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=45850

--- Comment #3 from Gabriel Dos Reis <g...@integrable-solutions.net> 2010-10-02 
17:30:05 UTC ---
On Sat, Oct 2, 2010 at 11:59 AM, manu at gcc dot gnu.org
<gcc-bugzi...@gcc.gnu.org> wrote:
> http://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=45850
>
> Manuel López-Ibáñez <manu at gcc dot gnu.org> changed:
>
>           What    |Removed                     |Added
> ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
>                 CC|                            |g...@integrable-solutions.ne
>                   |                            |t
>
> --- Comment #1 from Manuel López-Ibáñez <manu at gcc dot gnu.org> 2010-10-02 
> 16:59:28 UTC ---
> I would personally like to have this. I know most people that want this use a
> wrapper around gcc (or have moved to clang), but the output of gcc is not
> designed to be machine readable,

I believe different people have different take on this.  I've seen
people argue and get stuff in on the basis that the output should
be machine readable.  I would suggest restraint from sweeping
statements, in the quest for consensus.

> so I think there is a benefit on implementing
> this in GCC.
>
> Since gcc doesn't have caret or fix-it hints, my proposal is quite modest, 
> just
>  color the diagnostic markers:
>
> error: (bold red)
> warning: (magenta)
> note: (blue? green?)

my copy of GCC (under openSUSE) colors the output and let me
customize the colors.  That is quite system dependent.  Getting
the same stuff under non-Unix like system require more constraints
on the environment.  How far should we go to emulate an IDE?

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