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What is the compiler warning flag for zero variadic macro arguments in GCC (I am using GCC 5.3.0)?

The warning is triggered by code like this

// for illustration purposes only:
int foo(int i) { return 0; };
#define FOO(A, ...) foo(A, ##__VA_ARGS__)
FOO(1);
      ^  warning: ISO C++11 requires at least one argument for the "..." in a variadic macro

but the warning doesn't indicate which flag is used to enable/disable the warning (this is typically shown in square brackets [-Wwarning-flag-name]).

In clang it is -Wgnu-zero-variadic-macro-arguments. I haven't been able to find anything like that in the warning documentation of gcc-5.3.0.

I've tried -Wgnu-zero-variadic-macro-arguments, -Wvarargs, -Wno-variadic-macros (thanks to @ Revolver_Ocelot) but none of these is in charge of this warning.

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The warning flag that is causing the issue is -Wpedantic. This is because omitting variadic arguments is illegal and it requires a diagnostic. A warning satisfies that requirement.


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