What's the difference between __PRETTY_FUNCTION__
, __FUNCTION__
, __func__
, and where are they documented? How do I decide which one to use?
5 Answers
__func__
is an implicitly declared identifier that expands to a character array variable containing the function name when it is used inside of a function. It was added to C in C99. From C99 §6.4.2.2/1:
The identifier
__func__
is implicitly declared by the translator as if, immediately following the opening brace of each function definition, the declarationstatic const char __func__[] = "function-name";
appeared, where function-name is the name of the lexically-enclosing function. This name is the unadorned name of the function.
Note that it is not a macro and it has no special meaning during preprocessing.
__func__
was added to C++ in C++11, where it is specified as containing "an implementation-defined string" (C++11 §8.4.1[dcl.fct.def.general]/8), which is not quite as useful as the specification in C. (The original proposal to add __func__
to C++ was N1642).
__FUNCTION__
is a pre-standard extension that some C compilers support (including gcc and Visual C++); in general, you should use __func__
where it is supported and only use __FUNCTION__
if you are using a compiler that does not support it (for example, Visual C++, which does not support C99 and does not yet support all of C++0x, does not provide __func__
).
__PRETTY_FUNCTION__
is a gcc extension that is mostly the same as __FUNCTION__
, except that for C++ functions it contains the "pretty" name of the function including the signature of the function. Visual C++ has a similar (but not quite identical) extension, __FUNCSIG__
.
For the nonstandard macros, you will want to consult your compiler's documentation. The Visual C++ extensions are included in the MSDN documentation of the C++ compiler's "Predefined Macros". The gcc documentation extensions are described in the gcc documentation page "Function Names as Strings."
-
Can you link to the C99 specification (there's a floating link in your source), for what looks like the winning answer? Dec 8, 2010 at 7:02
-
1@legends2k: No, it is "an implementation-defined string" in C++11. That's the actual language from the specification. See §8.4.1[dcl.fct.def.general]/8. Jun 19, 2013 at 16:22
-
7Note that while both gcc and VC provide
__FUNCTION__
, they do slightly different things. gcc gives the equivalent of__func__
. VC gives the undecorated, but still adorned, version of the name. For a method named "foo", gcc will give you"foo"
, VC will give"my_namespace::my_class::foo"
. Jul 1, 2015 at 15:56 -
1What is curious is that I am using MSVC 2017 CE and when I type
__PRETTY_FUNCTION__
it does show up in the list as being available and when I move my mouse over it, it does display information about the function name, however it does fail to compile. Jul 8, 2017 at 8:48 -
2@FrancisCugler I was surprised by this as well! See my question on it stackoverflow.com/questions/48857887/… Feb 28, 2018 at 0:24
Despite not fully answering the original question, this is probably what most people googling this wanted to see.
For GCC:
$ cat test.cpp
#include <iostream>
int main(int argc, char **argv)
{
std::cout << __func__ << std::endl
<< __FUNCTION__ << std::endl
<< __PRETTY_FUNCTION__ << std::endl;
}
$ g++ test.cpp
$ ./a.out
main
main
int main(int, char**)
-
20
-
Ok, but does
__func__
work when it's embedded in another function? Lets say I have function1, it takes no arguments. function1 calls function2 that includes__func__
, which function name will be printed, 1 or 2?– MarcusJOct 6, 2017 at 13:11 -
1@MarcusJ why not try it yourself... the
__func__
is a macro, it will translate to whatever function you are currently in. If you put it into f1 and call f1 in f2, you will always get f1.– PetrOct 6, 2017 at 14:14 -
I was going to, then thought I'd ask. I feel like it won't work and it's kind of a pain in the ass so I'll just keep it the way it is.– MarcusJOct 6, 2017 at 14:19
-
6@Petr Strictly speaking
__func__
is a predefined identifier, not a macro. Nov 18, 2021 at 22:38
__PRETTY_FUNCTION__
handles C++ features: classes, namespaces, templates and overload
main.cpp
#include <iostream>
namespace N {
class C {
public:
template <class T>
static void f(int i) {
(void)i;
std::cout << "__func__ " << __func__ << std::endl
<< "__FUNCTION__ " << __FUNCTION__ << std::endl
<< "__PRETTY_FUNCTION__ " << __PRETTY_FUNCTION__ << std::endl;
}
template <class T>
static void f(double f) {
(void)f;
std::cout << "__PRETTY_FUNCTION__ " << __PRETTY_FUNCTION__ << std::endl;
}
};
}
int main() {
N::C::f<char>(1);
N::C::f<void>(1.0);
}
Compile and run:
g++ -ggdb3 -O0 -std=c++11 -Wall -Wextra -pedantic -o main.out main.cpp
./main.out
Output:
__func__ f
__FUNCTION__ f
__PRETTY_FUNCTION__ static void N::C::f(int) [with T = char]
__PRETTY_FUNCTION__ static void N::C::f(double) [with T = void]
You may also be interested in stack traces with function names: print call stack in C or C++
Tested in Ubuntu 19.04, GCC 8.3.0.
C++20 std::source_location::function_name
main.cpp
#include <iostream>
#include <string_view>
#include <source_location>
void log(std::string_view message,
const std::source_location& location = std::source_location::current()
) {
std::cout << "info:"
<< location.file_name() << ":"
<< location.line() << ":"
<< location.function_name() << " "
<< message << '\n';
}
int f(int i) {
log("Hello world!"); // Line 16
return i + 1;
}
int f(double i) {
log("Hello world!"); // Line 21
return i + 1.0;
}
int main() {
f(1);
f(1.0);
}
Compile and run:
g++ -std=c++20 -Wall -Wextra -pedantic -o main.out main.cpp
./main.out
Output:
info:source_location.cpp:16:int f(int) Hello world!
info:source_location.cpp:21:int f(double) Hello world!
so note how this returns the caller information, and is therefore perfect for usage in logging, see also: Is there a way to get function name inside a C++ function?
The proposal: http://www.open-std.org/jtc1/sc22/wg21/docs/papers/2019/p1208r5.pdf
The documentation says:
constexpr const char* function_name() const noexcept;
6 Returns: If this object represents a position in the body of a function, returns an implementation-defined NTBS that should correspond to the function name. Otherwise, returns an empty string.
where NTBS means "Null Terminated Byte String".
Tested on GCC 11.3 Ubuntu 22.04. It was not on GCC 9.1.0 with g++-9 -std=c++2a
.
__func__
is documented in the C++0x standard at section 8.4.1. In this case it's a predefined function local variable of the form:
static const char __func__[] = "function-name ";
where "function name" is implementation specfic. This means that whenever you declare a function, the compiler will add this variable implicitly to your function. The same is true of __FUNCTION__
and __PRETTY_FUNCTION__
. Despite their uppercasing, they aren't macros. Although __func__
is an addition to C++0x
g++ -std=c++98 ....
will still compile code using __func__
.
__PRETTY_FUNCTION__
and __FUNCTION__
are documented here http://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc-4.5.1/gcc/Function-Names.html#Function-Names. __FUNCTION__
is just another name for __func__
. __PRETTY_FUNCTION__
is the same as __func__
in C but in C++ it contains the type signature as well.
-
__func__
is not part of C++03. It has been added in C++0x, but C++0x is not yet "the C++ standard," it is still in draft form. Dec 8, 2010 at 6:53 -
6@JamesMcNellis It is now, so clear the comments, to remove the noise Sep 10, 2013 at 11:08
For those, who wonder how it goes in VS.
MSVC 2015 Update 1, cl.exe version 19.00.24215.1:
#include <iostream>
template<typename X, typename Y>
struct A
{
template<typename Z>
static void f()
{
std::cout << "from A::f():" << std::endl
<< __FUNCTION__ << std::endl
<< __func__ << std::endl
<< __FUNCSIG__ << std::endl;
}
};
void main()
{
std::cout << "from main():" << std::endl
<< __FUNCTION__ << std::endl
<< __func__ << std::endl
<< __FUNCSIG__ << std::endl << std::endl;
A<int, float>::f<bool>();
}
output:
from main(): main main int __cdecl main(void) from A::f(): A<int,float>::f f void __cdecl A<int,float>::f<bool>(void)
Using of __PRETTY_FUNCTION__
triggers undeclared identifier error, as expected.
-
1
void main()
is technically ill-formed.main
, however defined in terms of arguments must returnint
.– XeverousMar 27, 2022 at 9:29