I have come across some example code that goes like this:
#ifdef WIN32
...
#elif WIN64
...
#endif
In an #ifdef
block, is it actually legal to use #elif
to mean #elif defined
?
I have come across some example code that goes like this:
#ifdef WIN32
...
#elif WIN64
...
#endif
In an #ifdef
block, is it actually legal to use #elif
to mean #elif defined
?
No, it shouldn't be. That's not to say that some obscure C compiler wouldn't accept it as such, but it isn't part of the C standard.
Normally, for something like this you would use either #elifdef FOO
(which I've never actually seen in production code) or #elif defined(FOO)
(like you mentioned).
This code appears to be working in a odd way; it's rather first checking if WIN32
is defined, then checking if WIN64
is nonzero.
#elif
without argument).
Aug 22, 2014 at 16:32
WINxx
is defined as 1, this code isn't strictly wrong, just weird (prob. not what they intended). Remember undefined names expand to 0 in expressions, so this is ill-typed, but valid logic.
Aug 22, 2014 at 19:38
#define WINxx 1
, not #define WINxx
.
Aug 22, 2014 at 19:45