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Hi,

Initially I thought I needed this, but I eventually avoided it. However, my curiosity (and appetite for knowledge, hum) make me ask:

Can a preprocessor macro, for instance in

#include "MyClass.h"

INSTANTIATE_FOO_TEMPLATE_CLASS(MyClass)

expand to another include, like in

#include "MyClass.h"

#include "FooTemplate.h"
template class FooTemplate<MyClass>;

? Thanks!

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4  
Not to do with your question, but save yourself a future ocean of grief and make your file names all lower case, now and forever. – Neil Butterworth Aug 11 at 18:15
Why is that, Neil? I use capitals :( – GMan Aug 11 at 18:25
2  
One day you will want to transfer your code to an OS like Linux where case is significant (i.e. Foo.h and foo.h are two different files) and then all the misspellings that are not caught on Windows will come home to roost. alternatively, if you are a Linux person, you will one day want to go the other way, with different but equally horrible problems. – Neil Butterworth Aug 11 at 18:29
Interesting. I tend to double-check my spellings for consistency, guess I've been lucky enough to not have missed one while building on Linux. Means I need to code more :P – GMan Aug 11 at 18:30
I agree with the always-lowercase rule for file names. I wrote that this way because I wanted to exclude the issue of lowercase conversion (class name -> file name). But that is worth to mention, thanks. +1! – moala Aug 11 at 18:37
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3 Answers

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I believe that cannot be done, this is because the pre-processor is single pass. So it cannot emit other preprocessor directives.

Specifically, from the C99 Standard (6.10.3.4 paragraph 3):

3 The resulting completely macro-replaced preprocessing token sequence is not processed as a preprocessing directive even if it resembles one, ...

Interestingly enough, This is why the unary _Pragma operator was added to c99. Because #pragma could not be emited by macros, but _Pragma can.

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Well, it can of course emit the directives. what it cannot do is process them in the same preprocessor pass. – Neil Butterworth Aug 11 at 18:19
1  
Since the # and ## characters have special meanings in macros, I don't see how you could actually emit a directive... – Evan Teran Aug 11 at 18:21
Actually the GCC preprocessor seems to allow "#define X #ifdef X" where the space between the #ifdef and the second X is really a newline, and this actually emits a #ifdef when you run cpp on it. Someone else might like to check this, as I've just had a couple of beers :-) – Neil Butterworth Aug 11 at 18:37
Yea, it seems that it is possible to create something that "resembles" a directive, but the standard specifically states (see my edit) that such a construct is not processed as a directive. – Evan Teran Aug 11 at 18:41
Yes, I wasn't suggesting that the OP could do what he appears to want. – Neil Butterworth Aug 11 at 18:53
vote up 5 vote down

The C standard says this about preprocessing directives (C99 - 6.10(2) - Preprocessing directives):

A preprocessing directive consists of a sequence of preprocessing tokens that begins with a # preprocessing token that (at the start of translation phase 4) ...

and (C99 - 6.10(7)):

The preprocessing tokens within a preprocessing directive are not subject to macro expansion unless otherwise stated.

EXAMPLE In:

#define EMPTY
EMPTY # include <file.h>

the sequence of preprocessing tokens on the second line is not a preprocessing directive, because it does not begin with a # at the start of translation phase 4, even though it will do so after the macro EMPTY has been replaced

So, no, macros cannot expand into a '#include' preprocessing directive. Those directives need to be in place at the start of translation phase 4 (when handling those directives takes place preprocessing happens). Since macro expansion occurs during phase 4, macros can't cause something to exist at the start of phase 4.

I'd like to point out however, that the following does work:

#ifdef WIN32
#define PLATFORM_HEADER "platform/windows/platform.h"
#else
#define PLATFORM_HEADER "platform/linux/platform.h"

#include PLATFORM_HEADER

because the C standard says this (C99, 6.10.2(4) - Source file inclusion):

A preprocessing directive of the form

# include pp-tokens new-line

(that does not match one of the two previous forms) is permitted. The preprocessing tokens after include in the directive are processed just as in normal text. (Each identifier currently defined as a macro name is replaced by its replacement list of preprocessing tokens.)

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i looked at that part of the standard, but I don't think it is the most relevant section. The example is not one that tries to emit a directive. It is instead an example of a directive which is not preceeded by "whitespace" (even though the EMPTY macro resolves to whitespace). – Evan Teran Aug 11 at 18:46
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I'd agree that your quote from the standard is more directly relevant, but it wan't there when I answered. Even if the example above isn't the same as what's asked about, the bit about the preprocessing directive needing to be in place at the start of phase 4 also disallows macros from explanding into useful preprocessing directives, even if 6.10.3.4(3) says so more directly. (in other words, even if I don't think my answer is incorrect, yours is clearly a better answer). – Michael Burr Aug 11 at 18:54
Fair enough, you make a good point, +1 :-). – Evan Teran Aug 11 at 18:58
Sorry, but I had to choose a good answer. Another +1 on your insightful comment to be as fair as possible, I hope you understand. – moala Aug 11 at 23:24
No need to apologize - Evan's answer is definitely better. There's no need to apologize even if that weren't the case. – Michael Burr Aug 11 at 23:36
vote up 1 vote down

All preprocessor directives are interpreted before macro expansion begins, so no, you cannot have a macro expand into an #include directive and have it be interpreted as such. Instead, it will be interpreted as (erroneous) C++ code.

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