The OpenGL ES shader code is defined as a C string. To make writing the shader code more intuitively, I define a macro named SHADER_STRING(code)
like below. But I encounter a GCC warning unknown escape sequence: '\#'
and don't know how to suppress it or fix it.
A example code is below
#include <stdio.h>
int main(void)
{
#define _SHADER_STRING(code) #code
#define SHADER_STRING(code) _SHADER_STRING(code)
// OpenGL ES Shader codes
char vShaderStr[] = SHADER_STRING(
\#version 300 es \n
void main()
{
// ... some OpenGL ES codes.
});
printf("%s\n", vShaderStr);
return 0;
}
Because the #version
is a preprocessor supported by OpenGL ES 3.0, then it's invalid to replace the \#
with \\#
, otherwise the codes will become
\#version 300 es
void main() { }
The OpenGL shader compiler will complained knowing nothing about the \#version
.
#version …
?TS_SHADER_STRING
? OnlySHADER_STRING
is defined in the code fragment.\#
simply becomes#
with the mentioned warning. Why the escape at all? I've got a hunch that you copy-pasted this code from somewhere else and took it out of it's parsing context while doing so.void main() …
as part of the version string?