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I'm trying to create a string from multiple macros/values for use in a #include. I'm doing this to clean up some code for an initial state in a simple state system.

I have 2 default, redefinable macros (if not defined there's a default value)

   #define DEFAULT_STATE          StateName    // name of class
   #define DEFAULT_STATE_LOCATION states/      // location of header file from root

The include directive is being used from a file 4 folders in from the root, so the include should look like this

#include "../../../../states/StateName.h"

based on the example above.

So I want to define a macro from the 4 values.

../../../../
DEFAULT_STATE_LOCATION
DEFAULT_STATE
.h

into some macro, say DEFAULT_STATE_INCLUDE

so I can say

#include #DEFAULT_STATE_INCLUDE
(to stringize the value for quotes)

That way I can change the default state and the path from the root of the header file for the default state in a prefix header, and the source using the #include will not have to be updated, and I can omit the constants from redefinition every time.

I'm not including the .h in the DEFAULT_STATE macro because I use the same macro to create and instance of the default state.

I've tried using the concatenation ##, and the stringize operator, and some tricks I've found online, but nothing worked.

I can define ../../../../ and .h in their own macros if needed.

But simply

    #define DEFAULT_STATE_INCLUDE ../../../../ ## DEFAULT_STATE_LOCATION ## DEFAULT_STATE ## .h
    #include #DEFAULT_STATE_INCLUDE

gives tons of errors.

Any help is appreciated. Thanks

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  • 1
    This is normally the role of the build system to define the include path
    – fge
    Jan 8, 2012 at 23:32

3 Answers 3

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Note that footnote 143 in section §6.10.2 "Source file inclusion" of the C99 standard says:

143) Note that adjacent string literals are not concatenated into a single string literal (see the translation phases in 5.1.1.2); thus, an expansion that results in two string literals is an invalid directive.

Thus, any string concatenation must be done outside the source code. Token concatenation with ## is not an option; that is used to build identifiers, and the bits of the header name you are joining are not identifiers.

I think you should simply use something like:

#ifndef STATE_HEADER
#define STATE_HEADER "states/StateName.h"
#endif
#include STATE_HEADER

and leave it to the build system, not the source code, to determine that -I../../../.. is required as an option to the compiler.

1

You'd better pass the include directory to gcc with -I option

-I../../../..

From gcc man page:

-I dir
Add the directory dir to the list of directories to be searched for header files.
1

This seems relevant: Computed Includes

My reading of that is that the #define macro has to include the " (quote) characters and that you can't rely on the stringize or concatenation operators to do it for you.

3
  • Not quite: you can rely on the stringize and concatenation operators, and you can use the <> form, it's just that all of those are very tricky to use correctly. For an example not mentioned on that page, #include HEADER(errno) where HEADER(x) is defined as <x.h> is valid -- as long as errno is not already defined as a macro. If it is, then things break, rather badly.
    – user743382
    Jan 8, 2012 at 23:42
  • How would you get this to work if errno is a macro? If I could do that and just use 2 arguments to pass in the location and name macros, this would work fine Jan 9, 2012 at 0:00
  • @user1137704 Short answer: you can't. Longer answer: the only way to prevent macro expansion when errno appears as a separate token is to use the stringize operator directly, without a second macro expansion. But in that case, you just get "errno", which is useless for your purposes. To conclude, see short answer.
    – user743382
    Jan 9, 2012 at 0:26

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