(In reply to Eyal Rozenberg from comment #16)
> I'm not quite sure what a key function is,
Then read the link I gave you in PR 104918 comment 1.
> Not just learners. If you have a large class with many methods, whose
> implementation is spread across many files, it can take quite a bit of time
> to figure out which method implementation is missing.
The first one. They key function is the first non-inline, non-pure virtual function. Read the wiki page. I didn't write that page and suggest you read it just for fun.
The linker could easily say that, with no changes from GCC. That belongs in the binutils bugzilla though.
(In reply to Eyal Rozenberg from comment #16)
> I'm not quite sure what a key function is,
Then read the link I gave you in PR 104918 comment 1.
> Not just learners. If you have a large class with many methods, whose
> implementation is spread across many files, it can take quite a bit of time
> to figure out which method implementation is missing.
The first one. They key function is the first non-inline, non-pure virtual function. Read the wiki page. I didn't write that page and suggest you read it just for fun.
The linker could easily say that, with no changes from GCC. That belongs in the binutils bugzilla though.