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Justin Bogner authored
The C and C++ standards disallow using universal character names to refer to some characters, such as basic ascii and control characters, so we reject these sequences in the lexer. However, when the preprocessor isn't being used on C or C++, it doesn't make sense to apply these restrictions. Notably, accepting these characters avoids issues with unicode escapes when GHC uses the compiler as a preprocessor on haskell sources. Fixes rdar://problem/14742289 git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/cfe/trunk@193067 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
Justin Bogner authoredThe C and C++ standards disallow using universal character names to refer to some characters, such as basic ascii and control characters, so we reject these sequences in the lexer. However, when the preprocessor isn't being used on C or C++, it doesn't make sense to apply these restrictions. Notably, accepting these characters avoids issues with unicode escapes when GHC uses the compiler as a preprocessor on haskell sources. Fixes rdar://problem/14742289 git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/cfe/trunk@193067 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
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