Compiling with -Wconversion gives lots and lots of warning messages in the Qt headers
Affects | Status | Importance | Assigned to | Milestone | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
qt4-x11 (Ubuntu) |
Won't Fix
|
Undecided
|
Unassigned |
Bug Description
I noticed (and I think this is the case with many, many more versions of Qt) that when compiling with -Wconversion, the headers give lots and lots of warnings. For example, when compiling a program containing only "#include <QChar>" using <g++ -I/usr/
In file included from /usr/include/
/usr/include/
/usr/include/
In file included from /usr/include/
/usr/include/
/usr/include/
/usr/include/
/usr/include/
/usr/include/
/usr/include/
/usr/include/
/usr/include/
/usr/include/
/usr/include/
These are unmodified headers. Should I just not compile with -Wconversion, i.e. is this a wontfix bug? I understand that *really* fixing it makes the headers a lot more ugly and complicated, yet it's an ugly bug.
Seems like for example SuSE doesn't have this bug because it does not apply things like -Wconversion to files in /usr/include, or something like that. Would that be possible for Ubuntu? To which package do I file a bug?