Package: g++-4.2 Version: 4.2.1-4 Severity: minor Hi. Sometime in the last month or so, g++ has started spitting out at me a bunch of "warning: deprecated conversion from string constant to ‘char*’" messages. This apparently comes from -Wwrite-strings. However, according to the man/info pages, this option shouldn't be turned on unless explicitly requrested (not even -Wall turns it on). My makefile certainly certainly isn't turning it on, and I don't get this message when compiling in Fedora or OS/X. I've looked the the changelog.Debian and haven't seen anything to explain this. I can turn it off with a CXXFLAGS=-Wno-write-strings, but it's a pain to remeber this each time so I'd really appreciate it if you could fix this. :)
Thanks, -- System Information: Debian Release: lenny/sid APT prefers testing APT policy: (990, 'testing'), (110, 'unstable') Architecture: i386 (i686) Kernel: Linux 2.6.21cavy1 Locale: LANG=he_IL.UTF-8, LC_CTYPE=he_IL.UTF-8 (charmap=UTF-8) Shell: /bin/sh linked to /bin/bash Versions of packages g++-4.2 depends on: ii gcc-4.2 4.2.1-4 The GNU C compiler ii gcc-4.2-base 4.2.1-4 The GNU Compiler Collection (base ii libc6 2.6.1-1+b1 GNU C Library: Shared libraries ii libstdc++6-4.2-dev 4.2.1-4 The GNU Standard C++ Library v3 (d g++-4.2 recommends no packages. -- no debconf information -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]