<li>C++ Support: Clang is now capable of self-hosting! While still alpha-quality, Clang's C++ support has matured enough to build LLVM and Clang, and C++ is now enabled by default. See the <a href="http://clang.llvm.org/cxx_compatibility.html">Clang C++ compatibility page</a> for common C++ migration issues.</li>
+<li>Objective-C: Clang now includes experimental support for an updated Objective-C ABI on non-Darwin platforms. This includes support for non-fragile instance variables and accelerated proxies, as well as greater potential for future optimisations. The new ABI is used when compiling with the -fobjc-nonfragile-abi and -fgnu-runtime options. Code compiled with these options may be mixed with code compiled with GCC or clang using the old GNU ABI, but requires the libobjc2 runtime from the GNUstep project.</li>
+
<li>New warnings: Clang contains a number of new warnings, including control-flow warnings (unreachable code, missing return statements in a non-<code>void</code> function, etc.), sign-comparison warnings, and improved format-string warnings.</li>
<li>CIndex API and Python bindings: Clang now includes a C API as part of the
<li>ARM Support: Clang now has ABI support for both the Darwin and Linux ARM
ABIs. Coupled with many improvements to the LLVM ARM backend, Clang is now
suitable for use as a a beta quality ARM compiler.</li>
+
</ul>
</div>