This cannot work this way. For the preprocessor you are giving only one argument to the LOG
MACRO when it needs two.
You can solve it by doing something a bit easier:
#define MY_LOG_MESSAGE LOG(LEVEL1, "This is my log")
And use it like:
MY_LOG_MESSAGE
Explanation:
In the case:
#define LOG(level,text)
#define MY_LOG_MESSAGE LEVEL1,"This is my log"
LOG(MY_LOG_MESSAGE);
The preprocessor will not replace your Macro MY_LOG_MESSAGE
when it see the call to LOG
, it will pass it as argument (like a function).
It is only after that, when the preprocessor will replace the LOG
macro that it will rescan the replacement-list to see if there is more macro to process.
From the standard :
16.3.1 Argument substitution [cpp.subst]
- After the arguments for the invocation of a function-like macro have been identified, argument substitution takes place. A parameter in the replacement list, unless preceded by a
#
or ##
preprocessing token or followed by a ##
preprocessing token (see below), is replaced by the corresponding argument after all macros contained therein have been expanded. Before being substituted, each argument’s preprocessing tokens are completely macro replaced as if they formed the rest of the preprocessing file; no other preprocessing tokens are available.
It is said here that the macros passed as argument of another macro are expanded after that the arguments for the invocation of a function-like macro have been identified.
Then you can also force preprocessor to expand the macros:
#define LOG(level, text) whatever
#define MY_LOG_MESSAGE LEVEL1,"This is my log"
#define LOG_LVL1(args) LOG(args)
// ^^^^ ^^^^
// Pass a macro Will be expanded by the preprocessor here
// And LOG will receive the correct number of arguments
LOG_LVL1(MY_LOG_MESSAGE)
LOG
expand to?