The C spec says:
§6.10.1/1 The expression ... may contain unary operator expressions of the form defined identifier
or defined(identifier)
which evaluate to 1
if the identifier is currently defined as a macro name (that is, if it is predefined or if it has been the subject of a #define
preprocessing directive without an intervening #undef
directive with the same subject identifier), 0
if it is not.
§6.10.1/4 macro invocations in the list of preprocessing tokens that will become
the controlling constant expression are replaced (except for those macro names modified
by the defined
unary operator), just as in normal text. If the token defined
is
generated as a result of this replacement process or use of the defined
unary operator
does not match one of the two specified forms prior to macro replacement, the behavior is
undefined. After all replacements due to macro expansion and the defined
unary
operator have been performed, all remaining identifiers (including those lexically
identical to keywords) are replaced with the pp-number 0, and then each preprocessing
token is converted into a token.
(emphasis mine)
However, how macro replacement is very complex, and I think MSVC is defining foo
as defined(bar)
which is undefined behavior, wheras GCC is defining foo
as 1
correctly. Since MSVC is then in undefined behavior, it does strange things.
As you say, the easiest fix is
#ifdef foo
#define bar 1
#else
#define bar 2
#endif