Recognizing that I am 8years late to the OPs original question, and this is not not an answer, but in total agreement with the OP... I have suffered this many many times I too would want this.
This is one of my pet peeves with various IDEs, they can right-click compile a file but cannot right-click pre-process the file.
As others have said - this is super important when unwinding a series of nested macros that have shit all over the code and made the compiler vomit incomprehensible bullshit for error messages. Often the only way is to debug at the pre-processor output level.
I too am comming from a "make world" - I always have encoded a generic wildcard like target, like: "make foo.i" - or "make foo.i" that (A) preprocesses the code and dumps the output in the specified file, ie: foo.c (or foo.cpp) to 'foo.i'
Yea, copy/cut/paste the command line works, but it is not wonderful. I done that enough times that I prefer the 'make foo.i' method. Another thing is sometimes the make script (or in this case, the SCons script) might setup other environment variables that effect things that make it not work the same
#pragma once
or#ifndef
guards). So I want to know which path the preprocessor is following to first include a particular header file. I could painfully follow every#include
path, or just look at the preprocessed output.#define
smin
ormax
, then you#include <algorithm>
. This usually produces an incomprehensible mash of error messages and the easiest way to figure it out is to look at the preprocessed source.