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GCC allows attributes to be set on null statements. See Attribute Syntax, for details of the exact syntax for using attributes. Other attributes are available for functions (see Function Attributes), variables (see Variable Attributes), labels (see Label Attributes), enumerators (see Enumerator Attributes), and for types (see Type Attributes).
This example uses the fallthrough
statement attribute to indicate that
the -Wimplicit-fallthrough warning should not be emitted:
switch (cond) { case 1: bar (1); __attribute__((fallthrough)); case 2: … }
fallthrough
The fallthrough
attribute with a null statement serves as a
fallthrough statement. It hints to the compiler that a statement
that falls through to another case label, or user-defined label
in a switch statement is intentional and thus the
-Wimplicit-fallthrough warning must not trigger. The
fallthrough attribute may appear at most once in each attribute
list, and may not be mixed with other attributes. It can only
be used in a switch statement (the compiler will issue an error
otherwise), after a preceding statement and before a logically
succeeding case label, or user-defined label.