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If the upper bound of a subrange is 0 and the lower bound is positive, the type is a floating point type, and the lower bound of the subrange indicates the number of bytes in the type:
.stabs "float:t12=r1;4;0;",128,0,0,0 .stabs "double:t13=r1;8;0;",128,0,0,0 |
However, GCC writes long double the same way it writes
double, so there is no way to distinguish.
.stabs "long double:t14=r1;8;0;",128,0,0,0 |
Complex types are defined the same way as floating-point types; there is no way to distinguish a single-precision complex from a double-precision floating-point type.
The C void type is defined as itself:
.stabs "void:t15=15",128,0,0,0 |
I'm not sure how a boolean type is represented.
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