Displaying 4 results from an estimated 4 matches for "namemangl".
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namemangler
2004 Jun 19
1
[LLVMdev] MachineOperand: GlobalAddress vs. ExternalSymbol
...e names, because LLVM has a
> unusual mechanism where it allows objects with different types to have
> the same name. This means you can have:
>
> int %foo(int %X) { ret int %X }
> float %foo(float %X) { ret float %X }
>
> In the context of a code generator, you should use the NameMangler
> interface to make everything just work.
>
> If you're doing something else and think you need the symbol table, please
> let me know. Clients of the SymbolTable class are extremely rare (by
> design). The SymbolTable class is mostly an internal class that is
> automagica...
2004 Jun 18
0
[LLVMdev] MachineOperand: GlobalAddress vs. ExternalSymbol
...ecommend depending too much on the names, because LLVM has a
unusual mechanism where it allows objects with different types to have
the same name. This means you can have:
int %foo(int %X) { ret int %X }
float %foo(float %X) { ret float %X }
In the context of a code generator, you should use the NameMangler
interface to make everything just work.
If you're doing something else and think you need the symbol table, please
let me know. Clients of the SymbolTable class are extremely rare (by
design). The SymbolTable class is mostly an internal class that is
automagically used by the system to pro...
2004 Jun 18
3
[LLVMdev] MachineOperand: GlobalAddress vs. ExternalSymbol
Chris Lattner wrote:
> > Second, MO_ExternalSymbol is used for storing name of external
> > variable/function, right? Why it's not possible to use MO_GlobalAddress,
> > where returned GlobalValue* has isExternal set to true? The
> > GlobalValue::getName would return the name of the symbol.
>
> Using the GlobalValue is certainly the preferred way if you have it.
1998 Apr 30
2
Case sensitivity and Win95
The company I work for uses samba to allow access to Unix files from PCs
running Windows 95.
When I create a file from my PC on the samba drive with a name including
upper case letters, the name is forced into all lower case: I cannot
create a file name containing an upper case letter. From Unix, I can
create (and see from my PC) mixed-case file names.
I asked my system administrator