How can one achieve what the following code is trying to do?
#include "dir/*"
In Bash:
HEADER=all_headers.h
echo "#ifndef __ALL_HEADERS__" > $HEADER
echo "#define __ALL_HEADERS__" >> $HEADER
for file in dir/*.h
do
echo "#include <$file>" >> $HEADER
done
echo "#endif" >> $HEADER
for
loop with that.
__const
) mean in C?
Jun 19, 2019 at 23:28
{ echo "#ifndef ALL_HEADERS_INCLUDED"; echo "…"; for … done; echo "#endif"; } > $HEADER
to do a single output redirection. You can use newlines inside the braces; there must be a semicolon or newline before the closing brace. (See: How do I redirect the output of an entire shell script within the script itself?)
Jun 19, 2019 at 23:32
You can't, without running a script beforehand that generates all #include statements.
The preprocessor can only handle one file per #include statement, so it requires an actual #include for every single file you wish to be included in preprocessing.
One way to achieve that is to write a convenience header that includes all the headers you want. Keep in mind that including headers you will not use may unnecessarily increase compilation time.
Look at how Boost does this for, say, utility.hpp
.
$ cat /usr/include/boost/utility.hpp
// Boost utility.hpp header file -------------------------------------------//
<snip>
#ifndef BOOST_UTILITY_HPP
#define BOOST_UTILITY_HPP
#include <boost/utility/addressof.hpp>
#include <boost/utility/base_from_member.hpp>
#include <boost/utility/enable_if.hpp>
#include <boost/checked_delete.hpp>
#include <boost/next_prior.hpp>
#include <boost/noncopyable.hpp>
#endif // BOOST_UTILITY_HPP
Now you can just use #include <boost/utility.hpp>
.
C++
will never choose convenience over efficency; and doing this is precisely not efficient. It would allow you to save some keystrokes at the cost of having a much longer compilation time. Which one do you think pays more in the long term ?
dir/
and your text editor saves a temporary/backup file nameddir/somefile.h~
,dir/#somefile.h#
, ordir/somefile.h.tmp
, do you want to include that too?#include ""
is really up to the compiler. It may be helpful and interpret\
in paths for you, or even*
as a wildcard. You just can't rely on that. In practice, MSVC is helpful and translates/
to the native\
; but AFAIK no compiler expands*
.