http://d.puremagic.com/issues/show_bug.cgi?id=2466
Summary: -w error for homogeneous arithmetic is too stringent Product: D Version: 1.036 Platform: PC OS/Version: Windows Status: NEW Keywords: diagnostic Severity: normal Priority: P2 Component: DMD AssignedTo: [EMAIL PROTECTED] ReportedBy: [EMAIL PROTECTED] The following code produces four warnings with -w: void foo() { char c; short s; byte b; int i; c = c + c; s = s + s; b = b + b; i = i + i; s = c + c; } outputs: warning - testbug.d(8): Error: implicit conversion of expression (cast(int)c + cast(int)c) of type int to char can cause loss of data warning - testbug.d(9): Error: implicit conversion of expression (cast(int)s + cast(int)s) of type int to short can cause loss of data warning - testbug.d(10): Error: implicit conversion of expression (cast(int)b + cast(int)b) of type int to byte can cause loss of data warning - testbug.d(13): Error: implicit conversion of expression (cast(int)c + cast(int)c) of type int to short can cause loss of data This is inconsistent. If the warning system is warning about adding two of the same type together might produce loss of data, yes that could happen, but why not the same warning for integers? I can certainly add two ints together and lose data if I don't assign it to a long. And if that warning was added, the warning system would flag way too much code. Also, the s = c + c; producing a loss of data warning is plain wrong. I think if you are adding two of the same type together, and assigning it to the same type or larger type, it should compile without warnings. --