On Thu, 10 Nov 2022, Martin Uecker via Gcc wrote: > One problem with WG14 papers is that people put in too much, > because the overhead is so high and the standard is not updated > very often. It would be better to build such feature more > incrementally, which could be done more easily with a compiler > extension. One could start supporting just [.x] but not more > complicated expressions. Even a compiler extension requires the level of detail of specification that you get with a WG14 paper (and the level of work on finding bugs in that specification), to avoid the problem we've had before with too many features added in GCC 2.x days where a poorly defined feature is "whatever the compiler accepts". If you use .x as the notation but don't limit it to [.x], you have a completely new ambiguity between ordinary identifiers and member names struct s { int a; }; void f(int a, int b[((struct s) { .a = 1 }).a]); where it's newly ambiguous whether ".a = 1" is an assignment to the expression ".a" or a use of a designated initializer. (I think that if you add any syntax for this, GNU VLA forward declarations are clearly to be preferred to inventing something new like [.x] which introduces its own problems.) -- Joseph S. Myers joseph@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx