Is it only ANSI C that allow #if to compare symbols?
Norman Diamond
diamond at jit345.swstokyo.dec.com
Sat Jan 19 15:08:20 AEST 1991
In article <1991Jan18.170921.4866 at resam.dk> andrew at resam.dk (Leif Andrew Rump) writes:
>#define FOLDER fk
>#ifdef FOLDER
> part 1
>#endif
>#if FOLDER == fk
> part 2
>#endif
>
>It worked OK for part 1 ... but part 2 get compiled under any circumstances
>
>#ifdef FOLDER == CASE
> part 2
>#endif
>
>So this rules out that the presence is equal 1 and absence equal 0!
Absence equals zero, yes. Presence equals whatever the defined value is.
Now let's see what happens when you test
#if FOLDER == fk
#if fk == fk
#if 0 == fk
#if 0 == 0
which is true.
#ifdef FOLDER == CASE
is syntactically invalid. Assume you meant #if and let's see:
#if FOLDER == CASE
#if 0 == CASE
#if 0 == 0
If you want a macro to evaluate to something other than 0, you must give
it a value (a replacement-list) that evaluates as a constant-expression.
Doug Gwyn already posted correct examples.
--
Norman Diamond diamond at tkov50.enet.dec.com
If this were the company's opinion, I wouldn't be allowed to post it.
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