Thank you Richard. Similar to the struct example, I was also wondering about why the following code does *not* get optimized (e.g. https://godbolt.org/z/9eGrjjK81): int f(int* restrict a[restrict 2]) { *(a[0]) = 10; *(a[1]) = 11; return *(a[0]); } Do you happen to know why a reload via a[0] is required? I would have expected to see the same optimization as is performed for the struct example. Kind regards, Ties Op do 30 nov 2023 om 13:16 schreef Richard Biener < richard.guenther@gmail.com>: > On Thu, Nov 30, 2023 at 12:07 PM Ties Klappe via Gcc > wrote: > > > > When reading section 6.7.3.1 of the C standard (quoted below) about > > the *restrict > > *type qualifier, the first section talks about *ordinary identifiers*. > > These are defined in section 6.2.3, and exclude members of structures. > > > > Let D be a declaration of an ordinary identifier that provides a means of > > > designating an object P as a restrict-qualified pointer to type T. > > > > > > I would assume that this means that in the code excerpt below the > function > > *h* cannot be optimized by substituting the load of *b.p *for *10*, as > the > > standard does not specify what it means for a struct member to be > restrict > > qualified. However, the code is still optimized by gcc (but not Clang), > as > > can be seen here: https://godbolt.org/z/hEnKKoaae > > > > struct bar { > > int* restrict p; > > int* restrict q; > > }; > > > > int h(struct bar b) { > > *b.p = 10; > > *b.q = 11; > > return *b.p; > > } > > > > Was this a deliberate choice, or does it simply follow from how restrict > is > > supported in gcc (and could this be considered a bug w.r.t. the > standard)? > > Hmm, this was a deliberate choice (it also works for global 'b'), I didn't > think > the standard would exclude that. Note GCCs C++ standard library makes > use of restrict qualified pointers as structure members for example. > > Richard. >