I have a very big constant array that is initialized at compile time.
typedef enum {
VALUE_A, VALUE_B,...,VALUE_GGF
} VALUES;
const int arr[VALUE_GGF+1] = { VALUE_A, VALUE_B, ... ,VALUE_GGF};
I want to verify that the array is initialized properly, something like:
if (arr[VALUE_GGF] != VALUE_GGF) {
printf("Error occurred. arr[VALUE_GGF]=%d\n", arr[VALUE_GGF]);
exit(1);
}
My problem is that I want to verify this at compile time. I've read about compile-time assert in C in this thread: C Compiler asserts. However, the solution offered there suggests to define an array using a negative value as size for a compilation error:
#define CASSERT(predicate, file) _impl_CASSERT_LINE(predicate,__LINE__,file)
#define _impl_PASTE(a,b) a##b
#define _impl_CASSERT_LINE(predicate, line, file) \
typedef char _impl_PASTE(assertion_failed_##file##_,line)[2*!!(predicate)-1];
and use:
CASSERT(sizeof(struct foo) == 76, demo_c);
The solution offered dosn't work for me as I need to verify my constant array values and C doesn't allow to init an array using constant array values:
int main() {
const int i = 8;
int b[i]; //OK in C++
int b[arr[0]]; //C2057 Error in VS2005
Is there any way around it? Some other compile-time asserts?
const int x = arr[0];work? I don't think the problem is usingarr[0]as an array size, but trying to use the values inside thearrarray at compile time, no matter for what purpose. In this case you just can't do a static assert on the array contents. – sth Nov 8 '09 at 8:37mainfunction and replace it with one that checks the assertion? And is the property you want to check as obvious as in your example, perhaps intended to check the consistency of the compiler as in your example? I would like to suggest a static analysis tool that handles user properties, but if what you're checking is the compiler, this won't help. – Pascal Cuoq Nov 8 '09 at 9:29