There isn't really a complete answer on this question covering more than the big 3 compilers, so here's my attempt at a more complete answer.
Summary
- TL;DR: If you care for portability, put it before any
#include
or #define
statements that may conflict with it (e.g. put it first in the header).
- Supported by all major compilers ("the big 3" x86_64 compilers as well as intel, and embedded compilers)
- Placement generally does not matter as long as it reaches the preprocessor (e.g. not blocked by an
#if
-branch)
- Different compilers are opinionated on whether it should be first, without documenting what happens if not.
- Most compilers already detect include guards and treat it as a
pragma once
anyway, making the benefit largely just not creating a unique guard name.
Below is a quick, summarized guide:
(1) - Supported, but is subject to macro expansion
(2) - Supported, but is documented to be expected at the beginning of the header.
(3) - Supported, but not recommended.
Details
GCC
From the GCC reference manual:
If #pragma once
is seen when scanning a header file, that file will never be read again, no matter what. It is a less-portable alternative to using ‘#ifndef
’ to guard the contents of header files against multiple inclusions.
(emphasis mine)
Scanning is done at preprocessing time, and so as long as the #pragma
statement is visible to the preprocessor (not in an unreachable conditional block from #if
), then it will take effect.
GCC's #pragma once
is not affected by preprocessor substitution.
Live Example
Clang
Clang's reference manual doesn't actually specify #pragma once
so far as I can tell, however Clang is meant to be compatible with most, if not all, GCC builtins and features.
Viewing the source code for Clang's preprocessor phase indicates what you would expect; it handles #pragma once
during preprocessing (source)
void Preprocessor::HandlePragmaOnce(Token &OnceTok) {
...
// Mark the file as a once-only file now.
HeaderInfo.MarkFileIncludeOnce(getCurrentFileLexer()->getFileEntry());
}
Like GCC, the placement of the #pragma once
does not matter if it's first, and is not affected by preprocessor substitution.
Live Example
MSVC
MSVC's documentation on #pragma once
does not indicate where it belongs, just that it should be in a source (and has an example of it at the top).
As mentioned by others, when using #pragma once
in MSVC, it is subject to preprocessor-expansion.
With Substitution
Live Example
Without Substitution
Live Example
Intel (CL-Based)
When using the Intel compiler on Windows, the compiler uses an MSVC Compatibility mode (ICL). Although it's not documented in the Supported Pragma, though it does appear to be supported.
The placement does not appear to matter as well so long as the preprocessor reaches it.
ICL's #pragma once
is subject to the preprocessor-expansion issue that MSVC experiences.
Note: icl
is not supported on compiler-explorer, so no example is available.
Intel (GNU-Based)
When using the Intel compiler on Linux or older macOS versions (ICC), the compiler uses a GNU compatibility mode.
Like above, it's not explicitly listed as a Supported Pragma, though it does appear to be supported in practice. The placement does not appear to matter as well so long as the preprocessor reaches it.
ICC's #pragma once
is subject to the preprocessor-expansion issue that MSVC experiences.
With Substitution
Live Example
Without Substitution
Live Example
Intel (Clang-Based)
The newer Intel ICX NextGen compiler is based off of Clang / LLVM technology. Behaviourally, this matches what Clang does.
Unlike other Intel compilers, but like Clang, thisdoes not suffer from the preprocessor-expansion issue.
Live Example
Arm (armcc
)
The armcc
compiler advises against #pragma once
, but does also provide an example of it existing after #define
statements as an optional feature to work with inclusion guards.
Given the example, placement should likely not be an issue.
It's unclear where this will experience any preprocessor expansion.
Note: armcc
is not supported on compiler-explorer, so no example is available.
Texas Instruments (TI ArmCL)
As mentioned in the reference manual, section 5.11.23:
This pragma should be used at the beginning of a header file that should only be included once. For example:
// hdr.h
#pragma once
#warn You will only see this message one time
struct foo
{
int member;
};
(Emphasis mine)
I haven't tested what happens if it's moved anywhere lower than the comment header, but the compiler only officially supports it at the beginning of the file.
I would suspect this should not matter, but cannot confirm.
It's unclear where this will experience any preprocessor expansion.
Note: tiarmcl
(and other similar ti compilers) are not supported on compiler-explorer, so no example is available.
Texas Instruments (tiarmclang
)
This is a fork of clang
, so it behaves the same as clang
does.
The #pragma once
in this implementation can be effectively placed anywhere the preprocessor reaches, and does not deal with preprocessor substitution.
Note: tiarmclang
is not supported on compiler-explorer, so no example is available.