I would like to write code in C something like this:
if(defined(MACRO)) ... else ...
but I could not find any way to do this in
Why don't you simply define ASSERT
differently depending on that macro?
#ifdef MACRO
#define ASSERT(NAME, TEST) \
do { \
printf("Assert failed"); \
} while(0)
#else
#define ASSERT(NAME, TEST) {}
#endif
Using fixed preprocessor values in C conditionals should be avoided - sure the compiler should optimise the dead code out, but why rely on that when you can essentially remove the actual C code?
EDIT:
There is a rather ugly trick involving macro argument stringification that you might be able to use:
#include <string.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#define X
#define ERROR_(NAME, TEXT) \
if (strcmp("", #NAME) == 0) \
printf("%s\n", TEXT)
#define ERROR(n, t) ERROR_(n, t)
int main() {
ERROR(X, "Error: X");
ERROR(Y, "Error: Y");
return 0;
}
This outputs:
$ ./test
Error: X
Essentially it uses the fact that when a preprocessor token is not defined as a macro, it expands to itself. When, on the other hand, it is defined it expands to either an empty string, or its definition. Unless one of your macros has its own name as a definition, this hack should work.
Disclaimer: Use this at your own risk!
(...because I will most certainly not use it!)
EDIT 2:
The assembly output of gcc -O0 -S
for the program above is:
.file "test.c"
.section .rodata
.LC0:
.string "Error: X"
.text
.globl main
.type main, @function
main:
.LFB0:
.cfi_startproc
pushq %rbp
.cfi_def_cfa_offset 16
movq %rsp, %rbp
.cfi_offset 6, -16
.cfi_def_cfa_register 6
movl $.LC0, %edi
call puts
movl $0, %eax
leave
ret
.cfi_endproc
.LFE0:
.size main, .-main
.ident "GCC: (GNU) 4.4.3"
.section .note.GNU-stack,"",@progbits
Even with no optimisation, GCC reduces this program to a single puts()
call. This program produces exactly the same assembly output:
#include <stdio.h>
int main() {
puts("Error: X");
return 0;
}
Therefore, you are probably not going to have any performance issues, depending on your compiler and any optimisations...
A macro by comex is expanded to 1 if the argument is defined to 1. Otherwise it is expanded to 0:
#define is_set(macro) is_set_(macro)
#define macrotest_1 ,
#define is_set_(value) is_set__(macrotest_##value)
#define is_set__(comma) is_set___(comma 1, 0)
#define is_set___(_, v, ...) v
You can use it as follows:
if (is_set(MACRO)) {
/* Do something when MACRO is set */
}
Explanation:
The trick is based on variadic function-like macros (...
) and preprocessor token concatenation (##
).
is_set
is simply a wrapper to facilitate the expansion of its parameter.is_set_
tries to concatenate macrotest_
with the evaluated value of its input (comma
).
If its input is defined, then this works; otherwise is_set__
is called with macrotest_<macro>
where <macro>
is the original argument to is_set
(e.g., is_set(foo)
leads to macrotest_foo
if foo
is not a defined macro).
In is_set__
its parameter is again expanded but this only works out if it is passed macrotest_1
.
If it is, then is_set___(, 1, 0)
is called because comma
evaluates to ,
(note the 3 parameters!).
For any other value of comma (i.e., if the macro to be tested is undefined or has any other (expanded) value than 1
the parameter can not be expanded and thus is_set___(macrotest_<macro> 1, 0)
is called, which has only 2 arguments.
Eventually, is_set___
simply selects its second parameter for its "output" and drops everything else.
Due to the behavior of is_set__
this leads to either 1
if the macro to be tested is defined and 1, or 0
otherwise.
Ok, based on the previous post I got this idea, which seems to work:
#define DEFINEDX(NAME) ((#NAME)[0] == 0) #define DEFINED(NAME) DEFINEDX(NAME)
This will check if NAME is defined and therefore it expands to the empty string with 0 at its first character, or it is undefined in which case it is not the empty string. This works with GCC, so one can write
if( DEFINED(MACRO) ) ...