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Sometimes, people ask questions about why a certain program won't work with an open-source compiler, and the answer turns out to be that it is probably a bug in the compiler. One such example is herehere.

If it looks as if the bug isn't yet known, I recommend to file a bug report. If the user doesn't want to do so for himself, I think everybody is best served if somebody else files that report.

So, would it be OK to take code from a Stack Overflow post and put it on, for example, GCC Bugzilla, maintaing a link to the original code in the bug report to maintain attribution? What if the code (possibly modified) ended up in the GCC testsuite?

Sometimes, people ask questions about why a certain program won't work with an open-source compiler, and the answer turns out to be that it is probably a bug in the compiler. One such example is here.

If it looks as if the bug isn't yet known, I recommend to file a bug report. If the user doesn't want to do so for himself, I think everybody is best served if somebody else files that report.

So, would it be OK to take code from a Stack Overflow post and put it on, for example, GCC Bugzilla, maintaing a link to the original code in the bug report to maintain attribution? What if the code (possibly modified) ended up in the GCC testsuite?

Sometimes, people ask questions about why a certain program won't work with an open-source compiler, and the answer turns out to be that it is probably a bug in the compiler. One such example is here.

If it looks as if the bug isn't yet known, I recommend to file a bug report. If the user doesn't want to do so for himself, I think everybody is best served if somebody else files that report.

So, would it be OK to take code from a Stack Overflow post and put it on, for example, GCC Bugzilla, maintaing a link to the original code in the bug report to maintain attribution? What if the code (possibly modified) ended up in the GCC testsuite?

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Braiam
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Peter Mortensen
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Sometimes, people ask questions about why a certain program won't work with an open-source compiler, and the answer turns out to be that it is probably a bug in the compiler. One such example is here.

If it looks as if the bug isn't yet known, I recommend to file a bug report. If the user doesn't want to do so for himself, I think everybody is best served if somebody else files that report.

So, would it be OK to take code from a SOStack Overflow post and put it on, for example, gcc bugzillaGCC Bugzilla, maintaing a link to the original code in the bug report to maintain attribution? WhatWhat if the code (possibly modified) ended up in the gccGCC testsuite?

Sometimes, people ask questions about why a certain program won't work with an open-source compiler, and the answer turns out to be that it is probably a bug in the compiler. One such example is here.

If it looks as if the bug isn't yet known, I recommend to file a bug report. If the user doesn't want to do so for himself, I think everybody is best served if somebody else files that report.

So, would it be OK to take code from a SO post and put it on, for example, gcc bugzilla, maintaing a link to the original code in the bug report to maintain attribution? What if the code (possibly modified) ended up in the gcc testsuite?

Sometimes, people ask questions about why a certain program won't work with an open-source compiler, and the answer turns out to be that it is probably a bug in the compiler. One such example is here.

If it looks as if the bug isn't yet known, I recommend to file a bug report. If the user doesn't want to do so for himself, I think everybody is best served if somebody else files that report.

So, would it be OK to take code from a Stack Overflow post and put it on, for example, GCC Bugzilla, maintaing a link to the original code in the bug report to maintain attribution? What if the code (possibly modified) ended up in the GCC testsuite?

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