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I have problem that,std::numeric_limits::min() conflicts with the "min" macro defined in "windef.h". Is there any way to resolve this conflict without undefine the "min" macro. The link below gives some hints, however I couldn't manage to use parenthesis with a static member function.

What are some tricks I can use with macros?

Thank you in advance.

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  • 10
    Why doesn't the parenthesis trick work for you? Remember to wrap it around the whole expression, as in (std::numeric_limits<T>::min)() Sep 8, 2009 at 14:51
  • This worked. Thank you. Please sent it as a answer, I would like to accept it.
    – msh
    Sep 9, 2009 at 5:41
  • Thanks a bunch, can't believe I've been murking about with #undef's for years before someone brought this up...
    – Roel
    Dec 28, 2009 at 17:07
  • @Johannes Schaub - litb: Please send your comment as an answer, I would like to accept it.
    – msh
    Apr 20, 2011 at 7:09
  • @JohannesSchaub-litb The upvote I've done in the accepted answer should be for you, not for someone else who made an answer exactly as your comment two years later.
    – sergiol
    Feb 20, 2020 at 14:23

5 Answers 5

53

The workaround is to use the parenthesis: int max = (std::numeric_limits<int>::max)();

It allows you to include the windef.h, doesn't require you to #undef max (which may have adverse side effects) and there is no need to #define NOMINMAX. Works like a charm!

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    From what I understand it processes the value in the parenthesis first. the macro also takes in two parameters and but enclosing the function parenthesis it won't show any parameters to the macro.
    – Apeiron
    Aug 7, 2014 at 17:46
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The only really general solution is to not include windows.h in your headers.

That header is a killer, and does pretty much anything it can to make your code blow up. It won't compile without MSVC language extensions enabled, and it is the worst example of macro abuse I've ever seen.

Include it in a single .cpp file, and then expose wrappers in a header, which the rest of your code can use. If windows.h isn't visible, it can't conflict with your names.

For the min/max case specifically, you can #define NOMINMAX before including windows.h. It will then not define those specific macros.

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    Voted up, as we came to the same conclusion here. Among other evils, it adds about 19K per object file. We just created our own header file with the few things we typically need from windows.h in it.
    – T.E.D.
    Sep 8, 2009 at 14:07
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    Well, it's a typical Microsoft solution... "Our macros are causing trouble? Well, we'll just add a macro to disable them!" ;)
    – jalf
    Sep 8, 2009 at 15:08
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    @jalf Actually, windows.h was implemented a looong time ago, well before std::min (or any other standard min/max) was created. Changing windows.h by removing their min/max would have broken way too much code. Microsoft (nearly) always errs on the side of caution there: if you don't need min/max, you can tell it NOMINMAX. (This does not address the original problem where they defined a macro with non-capital letters.)
    – moswald
    Sep 8, 2009 at 15:17
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    @mos: I know, but as you point out, the root problem is that they gave the macros ridiculously bad names to begin with. And what's worse is that they then decided to create hundreds of new badly named macros when they added unicode support. They obviously hadn't learned anything from min/max.
    – jalf
    Sep 8, 2009 at 15:50
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    Replacing macro min in windows.h with std::min will make Windows work faster ;) min macro computes minimum value twice. Same for max macro. Sep 8, 2009 at 15:53
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In addition to jalf's answer, you could also #define WINDOWS_LEAN_AND_MEAN before including windows.h. It will get rid off min, max and some more noise from windows headers.

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  • Thank you. However in my project, that make much more headache.
    – msh
    Sep 9, 2009 at 5:45
1

Yep, I've meet the same problem. I found only one solution:

#ifdef min
#undef min
#endif //min

Place it right after includes have done.

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    Note that the #ifdef is unnecessary. It is ok to #undef a name that isn't defined as a macro, so #undef min is safe, regardless of whether min is defined. Feb 16, 2011 at 5:22
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Dewfy, The problem with that solution is if you nee to use the macro afteryards.

I even tried the defining NOMINMAX but it didn't work.

The best solution i found was the one from Johannes Schaub: (std::numeric_limits::min)()

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