I'm currently cleaning up an existing C-library to publish it shamelessly.

A preprocessor macro NPOT is used to calculate the next greater power of two for a given integral constant expression at compile time. The macro is normally used in direct initialisations. For all other cases (i.g. using variable parameters), there is an inline function with the same function.

But if the user passes a variable, the algorithm expands to a huge piece of machine code. My question is: What may I do to prevent a user from passing anything but an integral constant expression to my macro?

#define NPOT(x)   complex_algorithm(x)

const int c=10;
int main(void) {
    int i=5;

    foo = NPOT(5);   // works, and does everything it should
    foo = NPOT(c);   // works also, but blows up the code extremely
    foo = NPOT(i);   // blows up the code also
}

What I already tried:

  1. Define the macro to #define NPOT(x) complex_algorithm(x ## u). It still works and throws a - even if hardly helpful - compiler error for variable parameters. Unless there is no variable like iu... Dirty, dangerous, don't want it.
  2. Documentation, didn't work for most users.

Thank You for your ideas,

Lutz

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To moralize, I think this question is a very good example of why macros are bad to begin with. It is sort of like highly-addictive drugs. You know they are bad and once you start with them, you can't get out. You will find yourself needing more and more of them. Just look between the lines of what's really asked for here: "Does anyone know a macro to fix this macro, that calls a macro." – Lundin Feb 14 at 11:00
Even so I couldn't find anything bad having a macro calling another macro, that's not the point. Above complex_algorithm stands for anything You may want it to.To have a macro in addition to the inline function enables the use of it in direct initialisations while giving the chance to validate the parameters. – Lutz Feb 14 at 11:16
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2 Answers

up vote 4 down vote accepted

You can use any expression that needs a constant integral expression and that will then be optimized out.

#define NPOT(X)                                         \
 (1                                                     \
 ? complex_algorithm(X)                                 \
 : sizeof(struct { int needs_constant[1 ? 1 : (X)]; })  \
 )

eventually you should cast the result of the sizeof to the appropriate integer type, so the return expression is of a type that you'd expect.

I am using an untagged struct here to

  • have a type so really no temporary is produced
  • have a unique type such that the expression can be repeated anywhere in the code without causing conflicts
  • trigger the use of a VLA, which is not allowed inside a struct as of C99:

A member of a structure or union may have any object type other than a variably modified type.

I am using the ternary ?: with 1 as the selecting expression to ensure that the : is always evaluated for its type, but never evaluated as an expression.

Edit: It seems that gcc accepts VLA inside struct as an extension and doesn't even warn about it, even when I explicitly say -std=c99. This is really a bad idea of them.

For such a weird compiler :) you could use sizeof((int[X]){ 0 }), instead. This is "as forbidden" as the above version, but additionally even gcc complains about it.

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1  
I think that compiles with C99 VLA's. But struct { int needs_constant:X; } should work; variable-length bitfields are still not possible. – MSalters Feb 14 at 9:51
@MSalters, no it wouldn't compile with a VLA, they are not allowed inside struct. – Jens Gustedt Feb 14 at 9:54
VLA's are allowed inside a struct, but only as the last member. – Lutz Feb 14 at 10:11
@Lutz, no the are not allowed. Perhaps you think of flexible array members? These are different animals. Their syntax is with empty [] and there is no compile time size information about that flexible part. – Jens Gustedt Feb 14 at 10:13
nice use of the conditional operator for the type of the result! – ouah Feb 14 at 10:14
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#define INTEGRAL_CONST_EXPR(x) ((void) sizeof (struct {int a:(x);}), (x))

This will give a compile error if x is not a integral constant expression.

my_function(INTEGRAL_CONST_EXPR(1 + 2 + 3));    // OK
my_function(INTEGRAL_CONST_EXPR(1.0 + 2 + 3));  // compile error

Note that this solution does not work for initializing a static variable:

static int a = INTEGRAL_CONST_EXPR(2 + 3);

will trigger a compile error because of an expression with , is not a constant expression.

As @JensGustedt put in the comment, an integral constant expression resolving to a negative integer number cannot be used in this solution as bit-field width cannot be negative.

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No, doesn't work in C99 because then int[x] is simply a VLA. Also doesn't work if this is used in a context of a static initialization, since assert is a runtime check. – Jens Gustedt Feb 14 at 9:52
C99 allows this i think. Check MSalters comment – Anycorn Feb 14 at 9:53
@JensGustedt updated with bit-fields because of VLA – ouah Feb 14 at 9:54
@ouah, good try, but still doesn't work :( Bit-fields are even more restricted than array indices, they can't be negative they can't be big. The negative one applies to my solution, too, I'll update that. – Jens Gustedt Feb 14 at 9:59
@JensGustedt for VLA and static initialization I thought of it when writing my first attempt, but good point for negative I didn't think o f it. – ouah Feb 14 at 10:01
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