Standardized predefined CPP symbols, down with folklore
Dave Sherman
dave at utcsrgv.UUCP
Mon Jul 16 00:22:43 AEST 1984
In article <936 at orca.UUCP> andrew at orca.UUCP (Andrew Klossner) writes:
~| []
~|
~| "Actually, it wouldn't matter if the implementors had had the
~| sense to have cpp implcitly "#define unix unix", instead of
~| "#define unix 1". The first would still permit all "#ifdef
~| unix" work, while the actual implementation caused me grief one
~| day when I tried to create a function called unix()"
~|
~| Nope. "#define unix unix" followed by a use of "unix" will put the
~| preprocessor into a loop, scanning "unix" over and over, until the
~| recursion depth is hit and it punts with a fatal error message.
~|
Why should that be true? Since the preprocessor is putting it in
implicitly anyway, it could easily have the smarts to skip over "unix"
in any re-scans of lines. This can obviously be made different from
a user-suppled "#define unix unix".
Dave Sherman
Toronto
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