1

In a .h file I defined:

#define PAIR_TYPE(type1, type2)\
    typedef struct {     \     // added \ after edit  
      type1 first;       \     // added \ after edit  
      type2 second;      \     // added \ after edit  
    };     // added ; after edit        
#define MAKE_PAIR(val1, val2) {val1, val2}
PAIR_TYPE(char *, uint32_t) mypair;
mypair foo();

In the .c file I used it like this:

mypair foo()
{
   mypair p;
   uint32_t bar = calculate();
   p = MAKE_PAIR("normal", target);
   return p;
}

However I get this error:

error: expected expression before ‘{’ token

The line it points is:

p = MAKE_PAIR("normal", target);

I don't know why it says '{' !!! there is no '{' at that line.

1
  • There is a { on that line once the preprocessor has finished with it (hint: it will replace MAKE_PAIR with...). I suggest you look at the pre-processed output, your compiler almost certainly has an option flag to pre-process only.
    – Vicky
    Sep 28, 2011 at 14:17

4 Answers 4

7

You need more backslashes on the lines after '{'

#define PAIR_TYPE(type1, type2)\
  typedef struct {\
    type1 first;\
    type2 second;\
  }
4
  • I edited the post. This time I get error: unknown type name ‘mypair’ which points to mypair foo();
    – mahmood
    Sep 28, 2011 at 14:18
  • Don't put a semicolon in the macrodefinition. Also do't put comment in macros. It will bite you. Sep 28, 2011 at 14:19
  • which semicolon you mean? I added the comments only in the post.
    – mahmood
    Sep 28, 2011 at 14:21
  • Yes, that one. Normally, you should try to aim at "function style" macros, where the "caller" supplies the terminating ';', if any. That's the whole idea after the "funky do { ... } while(...)" construct. Sep 28, 2011 at 14:27
3

Yes there is! But it is hidden from your eyes by the preprocessor magic. Remember, the preprocessor is evil, and you are certainly over-using it.

The preprocessor just does textual substitution, so the code the compiler sees is actually:

p = {"normal", target};

And that is not valid C syntax. There, see, the '{'. That syntax is only valid in initialization, not in assignments:

mypair a = {"a", 1}; /* ok */
a = {"a", 1}; /* error */
0
0

In your PAIR_TYPE macro, you need to get rid of the semicolon at the end so that the name you give for the type is part of the typedef. Right now, when you do:

PAIR_TYPE(char *, uint32_t) mypair;

..you get:

typedef struct {
  char * first;
  uint32_t second;
}; mypair;

..which has a semicolon between the } and mypair that shouldn't be there.

You will also need to use a cast for your MAKE_PAIR macro to work the way you use it. Right now, the line:

p = MAKE_PAIR("normal", target);

..expands to:

p = {"normal", target};

..which won't work. But if you add a cast:

p = (mypair)MAKE_PAIR("normal", target);

..then the expanded line is:

p = (mypair){"normal", target};

..which can work since the type cast tells the compiler what the fields between the { and } should be. Though note that you're setting the char * in the first field to point at the literal "normal", not copying the string.

0

May be if you use c idiom to write macro as shown in the link, you will not have problem that you are experiencing. Please see http://c-faq.com/cpp/multistmt.html for details.

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