top | item 46186929 (no title) sumalamana | 2 months ago Why would the compiler do that, instead of just printing the error at compile-time and exiting with a non-zero value? What is the benefit? discuss order hn newest j16sdiz|2 months ago It is more a debug/development feature. You can try out some idea without fixing the whole code base. dnautics|2 months ago if you have a syntax error in file A, and file B is just peachy keen, you can keep compiling file B instead of stopping the world. Then the next time you compile, you have already cached the result of file B compilation.
j16sdiz|2 months ago It is more a debug/development feature. You can try out some idea without fixing the whole code base.
dnautics|2 months ago if you have a syntax error in file A, and file B is just peachy keen, you can keep compiling file B instead of stopping the world. Then the next time you compile, you have already cached the result of file B compilation.
j16sdiz|2 months ago
dnautics|2 months ago