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What does @#expression1, expression2, @#expression2 mean in the context below?

The code is Objective-C, but Objective-C still uses the C preprocessor.

#define XCTAssertEqualObjects(expression1, expression2, ...) \
    _XCTPrimitiveAssertEqualObjects(self, expression1, @#expression1, expression2, @#expression2, __VA_ARGS__)

#define _XCTPrimitiveAssertEqualObjects(test, expression1, expressionStr1, expression2, expressionStr2, ...) \
({ \
    @try { \
        id expressionValue1 = (expression1); \
        id expressionValue2 = (expression2); \
        if ((expressionValue1 != expressionValue2) && ![expressionValue1 isEqual:expressionValue2]) { \
            _XCTRegisterFailure(test, _XCTFailureDescription(_XCTAssertion_EqualObjects, 0, expressionStr1, expressionStr2, expressionValue1, expressionValue2), __VA_ARGS__); \
        } \
    } \
    @catch (_XCTestCaseInterruptionException *interruption) { [interruption raise]; } \
    @catch (NSException *exception) { \
        _XCTRegisterFailure(test, _XCTFailureDescription(_XCTAssertion_EqualObjects, 1, expressionStr1, expressionStr2, [exception reason]), __VA_ARGS__); \
    } \
    @catch (...) { \
        _XCTRegisterFailure(test, _XCTFailureDescription(_XCTAssertion_EqualObjects, 2, expressionStr1, expressionStr2), __VA_ARGS__); \
    } \
})
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  • 2
    Are you sure that's C? Jan 30, 2016 at 0:09
  • This looks like Objective-C. Jan 30, 2016 at 0:10
  • Yes, this isn't C. It's Objective-C, but Objective-C still has the same preprocessor as C. Jan 30, 2016 at 0:50

1 Answer 1

2

XCTAssertEqualObjects is turning the expression you're verifying into a string, so in the event of a failure, it can print the expression that failed (through _XCTPrimitiveAssertEqualObjects and _XCTRegisterFailure).

In the C preprocessor, using a # will stringify whatever's passed in, so you can use it as a constant. By prefixing @ to the string, it becomes an Objective-C string constant.

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