Similar to the __inline storage-class modifier, the inline storage-class modifier can be used as a declaration specifier in the declaration of a function. This modifier is supported in relaxed ANSI C mode (/STANDARD=RELAXED) or if the /ACCEPT=C99_KEYWORDS or /ACCEPT=GCCINLINE qualifier is specified. With static functions, inline has the same effect as applying __inline or #pragma inline to the function. However, when inline is applied to a function with external linkage, besides allowing calls within that translation unit to be inlined, the inline semantics provide additional rules that also allow calls to the function to be inlined in other translation units or for the function to be called as an external function, at the compiler's discretion: o If the inline keyword is used on a function declaration with external linkage, then the function must also be defined in the same translation unit. o If all of the file scope declarations of the function use the inline keyword but do not use the extern keyword, then the definition in that translation unit is called an inline definition, and no externally-callable definition is produced by that compilation unit. Otherwise, the compilation unit does produce an externally-callable definition. o An inline definition must not contain a definition of a modifiable object with static storage duration, and it must not refer to an identifier with internal linkage. These restrictions do not apply to the externally-callable definition. o As usual, at most one compilation unit in an entire program can supply an externally-callable definition of a given function. o Any call to a function with external linkage may be translated as a call to an external function, regardless of the presence of the inline qualifier. It follows from this and the previous point that any function with external linkage that is called must have exactly one externally-callable definition among all the compilation units of an entire program. o The address of an inline function with external linkage is always computed as the address of the unique externally-callable definition, never the address of an inline definition. o A call to inline function made through a pointer to the externally-callable definition may still be inlined or translated as a call to an inline definition, if the compiler can determine the name of the function whose address was stored in the pointer.