Mike Williams wrote:
mwoehlke did utter on 11/09/2006 18:37:
Mike Williams wrote:
mwoehlke did utter on 11/09/2006 17:44:
Bram Moolenaar wrote:
I don't know what the rules are in all kinds of C, but at least things
like 0x0L, 0x0u, 0x0UL are valid.

Using a match instead of region would be simpler.

If one takes KATE's c.xml as canonical, supported suffixes (but not necessarily on all build configurations) are all combinations of 'U', 'L' and 'L', with no mention of 'u'. That makes: ULL, LUL, LLU, LL, UL, LU, L and U. As a regexp, 'U?L?L?|L?(UL|LU)'.

Standard C only allows the following suffixes (in lower or uppercase):

  u, ul, ull, l, lu, and llu.

D'oh! I looked again, and I see that c.xml says 'insensitive="TRUE"', so all of the above are case-insensitive. But you are saying that 'ull'/'llu' are supported, but NOT 'll'? That can't be right? I would not be surprised if 'lul' is not well-supported, however.

Mea culpa, you are right. Add an ll to the above list. What are not valid is lul.

Ah, whew, my faith in standards is restored. :-)
Thanks for following up.

--
Matthew
Ok, so the quotes aren't entirely original.

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