/FLAG=(option[,...]) /NOFLAG Specifies which classes of informational messages the compiler reports. The options are: Option Description ALIGNMENT Reports unaligned stack and memory references. ALL Enables all options. ARGLIST Reports that the argument list has been homed. CODEGEN Reports run-time code generation, such as self- modifying code. DIRECTIVES Reports unsupported directives. HINTS Reports input/output/auto-preserved register hints. INSTRUCTIONS Reports instructions that use absolute addresses that might compile correctly, but should be examined anyway, because the desired absolute address might be different on the system. JUMPS Reports branches between routines. NONE Disables all options. STACK Reports all messages caused by user stack manipulation. At compiler activation, the default is /FLAG=(ALIGNMENT, ARGLIST, CODEGEN, DIRECTIVES, INSTRUCTIONS, JUMPS, STACK). NOTE Use of the /NOFLAG and /FLAG qualifiers together to activate a specific subset of cross-compiler messages does not work as expected. When used together, as in /NOFLAG/FLAG=(keyword,keyword), instead of activating only the messages specified by the keywords, all cross-compiler messages are activated. However, use of /FLAG=(none,keyword) activates only those messages specified by the keyword. Note that specifying /NOFLAG or /FLAG=NONE does not disable the reporting of coding constructs that would prevent a successful compilation. The compiler continues to report code that you must change, such as an up-level stack reference.