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I want to define a macro like

#define AUTO_FUC(x) void x(){}

to define a function named x.

I think the function name will be replaced by x passed by arg x.

AUTO_FUC("test")//it should equal to void test(){} I think

But it didn't.

So how to do this in C++?


I use MinGW and use the macro twice with different args.

AUTO_FUC("A")
AUTO_FUC("B")

It didn't give me function A() and B().Compiler told me void someClass::x() cannot be overloaded.So I know the macro didn't work.


Thanks ,I realize the void "A"() is not a correct function. I forgot I pass a macro as arg and the marco is a string.

And further question. What I really want is create a function with name according to a variable value.And variable value can be write like string a = a;? It should have " am I right? So If I use a string like "A", how can I use the A to create the function void A() when pass the value to marco?

#include <string>
#include <iostream>

#define AUTO_FUC(x) \
void x() \
{\
    std::cout<<"hi";\
}\

int main()
{
    std::string A = "A";
    AUTO_FUC(A);  //it's equal to AUTO_FUC("A") it wrong
    A(); //So it's undefined;
}
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  • 5
    How do you know it didn't work? Jun 5, 2014 at 9:05
  • 2
  • 3
    AUTO_FUC is an interesting name for this macro, what do you want it to do? Jun 5, 2014 at 9:07
  • 2
    @MattCoubrough I saw something similar on a website the other day at work and then got told off for "browsing for private interests".
    – Kerrek SB
    Jun 5, 2014 at 9:10
  • "What I really want..." you can't, but if you explain why you want to perhaps we can suggest something. (To elaborate: AUTO_FUC(A) will generate a function called A whether or not A happens to be a local string variable with whatever value, so A() is defined but not because the variable A had value "A" - you should get more creative with your values so it's less confusing! ;-P) Jun 5, 2014 at 10:17

2 Answers 2

2

The problem is that you're not passing in A and B (identifiers). You're passing in "A" and "B" (string literals). Macros are textual replacement. So they expand to:

void "A"(){}
void "B"(){}

Surely you'll agree that's not correct C++ code. Change it to this:

AUTO_FUC(A)
AUTO_FUC(B)
2

[ UPDATE: you've edited your question and now show code where the macro parameters are quoted. Next time, try to post your actual code when asking the question! ;-P ]

Your code works just fine... see it running at ideone.com here

#include <iostream>

#define AUTO_FUC(x) void x(){ std::cout << "hi!\n"; }
AUTO_FUC(test)

int main()
{
    test();
}

stdout

hi!

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