Second example.
> if (!b)
> {
> b = a; // a being an ivar array.
> }
Yep. That's an example of code that Sfx curently executes uncoditionally.
Surely, it's either an i-rate assignment, or it's an illegal statment due to
an effective guard-rate restriction. So I don't think Sfx is out of
compliance here. The question is: "is this legal code?". Should it be
flagged as an error?
So. Giorgo! I couldn't make out what SAINT actually does with the second
example. Does it compile the code? What's the final output? I'm interested.
Regards,
Robin.
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