Please pardon me if I am asking an obvious question, but after going through a bunch of threads and trying out stuff, I am not able to pin down this simple thing.
I have this small program:
#define FUNC_PREFIX __FUNCTION__ "() :"
int main()
{
printf("%s\n", FUNC_PREFIX);
return 0;
}
So I can pass FUNC_PREFIX
instead of __FUNCTION__
to log functions and they will print the calling function name followed by paren and colon — just so to improve readability of log line outputs.
This compiles fine as-is in Visual Studio 2008.
But in g++
, I get an error expected ‘)’ before string constant
I tried a few things like doing:
#define TEMP __FUNCTION__
#define FUNC_PREFIX TEMP "() :"
but to no avail.
What is the way to go about doing this?
#define FUNC_PREFIX __func__,"() :"
cannot be used in many places other than aprintf
-family function. For example,strcpy(buffer, FUNC_PREFIX)
won't compile butstrcpy(buffer, (FUNC_PREFIX))
will — but it won't do what you want.