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-rw-r--r--googlemock/include/gmock/internal/gmock-internal-utils.h19
1 files changed, 0 insertions, 19 deletions
diff --git a/googlemock/include/gmock/internal/gmock-internal-utils.h b/googlemock/include/gmock/internal/gmock-internal-utils.h
index 7bfa54c..8f6c08b 100644
--- a/googlemock/include/gmock/internal/gmock-internal-utils.h
+++ b/googlemock/include/gmock/internal/gmock-internal-utils.h
@@ -106,25 +106,6 @@ inline Element* GetRawPointer(Element* p) { return p; }
# define GMOCK_WCHAR_T_IS_NATIVE_ 1
#endif
-// signed wchar_t and unsigned wchar_t are NOT in the C++ standard.
-// Using them is a bad practice and not portable. So DON'T use them.
-//
-// Still, Google Mock is designed to work even if the user uses signed
-// wchar_t or unsigned wchar_t (obviously, assuming the compiler
-// supports them).
-//
-// To gcc,
-// wchar_t == signed wchar_t != unsigned wchar_t == unsigned int
-//
-// gcc-9 appears to treat signed/unsigned wchar_t as ill-formed
-// regardless of the signage of its underlying type.
-#ifdef __GNUC__
-#if !defined(__WCHAR_UNSIGNED__) && (__GNUC__ < 9)
-// signed/unsigned wchar_t are valid types.
-# define GMOCK_HAS_SIGNED_WCHAR_T_ 1
-#endif
-#endif
-
// In what follows, we use the term "kind" to indicate whether a type
// is bool, an integer type (excluding bool), a floating-point type,
// or none of them. This categorization is useful for determining