cpp.texi revision 117395
1\input texinfo
2@setfilename cpp.info
3@settitle The C Preprocessor
4@setchapternewpage off
5@c @smallbook
6@c @cropmarks
7@c @finalout
8
9@copying
10@c man begin COPYRIGHT
11Copyright @copyright{} 1987, 1989, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996,
121997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003
13Free Software Foundation, Inc.
14
15Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document
16under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.1 or
17any later version published by the Free Software Foundation.  A copy of
18the license is included in the
19@c man end
20section entitled ``GNU Free Documentation License''.
21@ignore
22@c man begin COPYRIGHT
23man page gfdl(7).
24@c man end
25@end ignore
26
27@c man begin COPYRIGHT
28This manual contains no Invariant Sections.  The Front-Cover Texts are
29(a) (see below), and the Back-Cover Texts are (b) (see below).
30
31(a) The FSF's Front-Cover Text is:
32
33     A GNU Manual
34
35(b) The FSF's Back-Cover Text is:
36
37     You have freedom to copy and modify this GNU Manual, like GNU
38     software.  Copies published by the Free Software Foundation raise
39     funds for GNU development.
40@c man end
41@end copying
42
43@macro gcctabopt{body}
44@code{\body\}
45@end macro
46
47@c Create a separate index for command line options.
48@defcodeindex op
49@syncodeindex vr op
50
51@c Used in cppopts.texi and cppenv.texi.
52@set cppmanual
53
54@ifinfo
55@dircategory Programming
56@direntry
57* Cpp: (cpp).		       The GNU C preprocessor.
58@end direntry
59@end ifinfo
60
61@titlepage
62@title The C Preprocessor
63@subtitle Last revised April 2001
64@subtitle for GCC version 3
65@author Richard M. Stallman
66@author Zachary Weinberg
67@page
68@c There is a fill at the bottom of the page, so we need a filll to
69@c override it.
70@vskip 0pt plus 1filll
71@insertcopying
72@end titlepage
73@contents
74@page
75
76@ifnottex
77@node Top
78@top
79The C preprocessor implements the macro language used to transform C,
80C++, and Objective-C programs before they are compiled.  It can also be
81useful on its own.
82
83@menu
84* Overview::
85* Header Files::
86* Macros::
87* Conditionals::
88* Diagnostics::
89* Line Control::
90* Pragmas::
91* Other Directives::
92* Preprocessor Output::
93* Traditional Mode::
94* Implementation Details::
95* Invocation::
96* Environment Variables::
97* GNU Free Documentation License::
98* Index of Directives::
99* Option Index::
100* Concept Index::
101
102@detailmenu
103 --- The Detailed Node Listing ---
104
105Overview
106
107* Initial processing::
108* Tokenization::
109* The preprocessing language::
110
111Header Files
112
113* Include Syntax::
114* Include Operation::
115* Search Path::
116* Once-Only Headers::
117* Computed Includes::
118* Wrapper Headers::
119* System Headers::
120
121Macros
122
123* Object-like Macros::
124* Function-like Macros::
125* Macro Arguments::
126* Stringification::
127* Concatenation::
128* Variadic Macros::
129* Predefined Macros::
130* Undefining and Redefining Macros::
131* Directives Within Macro Arguments::
132* Macro Pitfalls::
133
134Predefined Macros
135
136* Standard Predefined Macros::
137* Common Predefined Macros::
138* System-specific Predefined Macros::
139* C++ Named Operators::
140
141Macro Pitfalls
142
143* Misnesting::
144* Operator Precedence Problems::
145* Swallowing the Semicolon::
146* Duplication of Side Effects::
147* Self-Referential Macros::
148* Argument Prescan::
149* Newlines in Arguments::
150
151Conditionals
152
153* Conditional Uses::
154* Conditional Syntax::
155* Deleted Code::
156
157Conditional Syntax
158
159* Ifdef::
160* If::
161* Defined::
162* Else::
163* Elif::
164
165Implementation Details
166
167* Implementation-defined behavior::
168* Implementation limits::
169* Obsolete Features::
170* Differences from previous versions::
171
172Obsolete Features
173
174* Assertions::
175* Obsolete once-only headers::
176
177@end detailmenu
178@end menu
179
180@insertcopying
181@end ifnottex
182
183@node Overview
184@chapter Overview
185@c man begin DESCRIPTION
186The C preprocessor, often known as @dfn{cpp}, is a @dfn{macro processor}
187that is used automatically by the C compiler to transform your program
188before compilation.  It is called a macro processor because it allows
189you to define @dfn{macros}, which are brief abbreviations for longer
190constructs.
191
192The C preprocessor is intended to be used only with C, C++, and
193Objective-C source code.  In the past, it has been abused as a general
194text processor.  It will choke on input which does not obey C's lexical
195rules.  For example, apostrophes will be interpreted as the beginning of
196character constants, and cause errors.  Also, you cannot rely on it
197preserving characteristics of the input which are not significant to
198C-family languages.  If a Makefile is preprocessed, all the hard tabs
199will be removed, and the Makefile will not work.
200
201Having said that, you can often get away with using cpp on things which
202are not C@.  Other Algol-ish programming languages are often safe
203(Pascal, Ada, etc.) So is assembly, with caution.  @option{-traditional-cpp}
204mode preserves more white space, and is otherwise more permissive.  Many
205of the problems can be avoided by writing C or C++ style comments
206instead of native language comments, and keeping macros simple.
207
208Wherever possible, you should use a preprocessor geared to the language
209you are writing in.  Modern versions of the GNU assembler have macro
210facilities.  Most high level programming languages have their own
211conditional compilation and inclusion mechanism.  If all else fails,
212try a true general text processor, such as GNU M4.
213
214C preprocessors vary in some details.  This manual discusses the GNU C
215preprocessor, which provides a small superset of the features of ISO
216Standard C@.  In its default mode, the GNU C preprocessor does not do a
217few things required by the standard.  These are features which are
218rarely, if ever, used, and may cause surprising changes to the meaning
219of a program which does not expect them.  To get strict ISO Standard C,
220you should use the @option{-std=c89} or @option{-std=c99} options, depending
221on which version of the standard you want.  To get all the mandatory
222diagnostics, you must also use @option{-pedantic}.  @xref{Invocation}.
223
224This manual describes the behavior of the ISO preprocessor.  To
225minimize gratuitous differences, where the ISO preprocessor's
226behavior does not conflict with traditional semantics, the
227traditional preprocessor should behave the same way.  The various
228differences that do exist are detailed in the section @ref{Traditional
229Mode}.
230
231For clarity, unless noted otherwise, references to @samp{CPP} in this
232manual refer to GNU CPP.
233@c man end
234
235@menu
236* Initial processing::
237* Tokenization::
238* The preprocessing language::
239@end menu
240
241@node Initial processing
242@section Initial processing
243
244The preprocessor performs a series of textual transformations on its
245input.  These happen before all other processing.  Conceptually, they
246happen in a rigid order, and the entire file is run through each
247transformation before the next one begins.  CPP actually does them
248all at once, for performance reasons.  These transformations correspond
249roughly to the first three ``phases of translation'' described in the C
250standard.
251
252@enumerate
253@item
254@cindex character sets
255@cindex line endings
256The input file is read into memory and broken into lines.
257
258CPP expects its input to be a text file, that is, an unstructured
259stream of ASCII characters, with some characters indicating the end of a
260line of text.  Extended ASCII character sets, such as ISO Latin-1 or
261Unicode encoded in UTF-8, are also acceptable.  Character sets that are
262not strict supersets of seven-bit ASCII will not work.  We plan to add
263complete support for international character sets in a future release.
264
265Different systems use different conventions to indicate the end of a
266line.  GCC accepts the ASCII control sequences @kbd{LF}, @kbd{@w{CR
267LF}}, @kbd{CR}, and @kbd{@w{LF CR}} as end-of-line markers.  The first
268three are the canonical sequences used by Unix, DOS and VMS, and the
269classic Mac OS (before OSX) respectively.  You may therefore safely copy
270source code written on any of those systems to a different one and use
271it without conversion.  (GCC may lose track of the current line number
272if a file doesn't consistently use one convention, as sometimes happens
273when it is edited on computers with different conventions that share a
274network file system.)  @kbd{@w{LF CR}} is included because it has been
275reported as an end-of-line marker under exotic conditions.
276
277If the last line of any input file lacks an end-of-line marker, the end
278of the file is considered to implicitly supply one.  The C standard says
279that this condition provokes undefined behavior, so GCC will emit a
280warning message.
281
282@item
283@cindex trigraphs
284@anchor{trigraphs}If trigraphs are enabled, they are replaced by their
285corresponding single characters.  By default GCC ignores trigraphs,
286but if you request a strictly conforming mode with the @option{-std}
287option, or you specify the @option{-trigraphs} option, then it
288converts them.
289
290These are nine three-character sequences, all starting with @samp{??},
291that are defined by ISO C to stand for single characters.  They permit
292obsolete systems that lack some of C's punctuation to use C@.  For
293example, @samp{??/} stands for @samp{\}, so @t{'??/n'} is a character
294constant for a newline.
295
296Trigraphs are not popular and many compilers implement them incorrectly.
297Portable code should not rely on trigraphs being either converted or
298ignored.  If you use the @option{-Wall} or @option{-Wtrigraphs} options,
299GCC will warn you when a trigraph would change the meaning of your
300program if it were converted.
301
302In a string constant, you can prevent a sequence of question marks from
303being confused with a trigraph by inserting a backslash between the
304question marks.  @t{"(??\?)"} is the string @samp{(???)}, not
305@samp{(?]}.  Traditional C compilers do not recognize this idiom.
306
307The nine trigraphs and their replacements are
308
309@example
310Trigraph:       ??(  ??)  ??<  ??>  ??=  ??/  ??'  ??!  ??-
311Replacement:      [    ]    @{    @}    #    \    ^    |    ~
312@end example
313
314@item
315@cindex continued lines
316@cindex backslash-newline
317Continued lines are merged into one long line.
318
319A continued line is a line which ends with a backslash, @samp{\}.  The
320backslash is removed and the following line is joined with the current
321one.  No space is inserted, so you may split a line anywhere, even in
322the middle of a word.  (It is generally more readable to split lines
323only at white space.)
324
325The trailing backslash on a continued line is commonly referred to as a
326@dfn{backslash-newline}.
327
328If there is white space between a backslash and the end of a line, that
329is still a continued line.  However, as this is usually the result of an
330editing mistake, and many compilers will not accept it as a continued
331line, GCC will warn you about it.
332
333@item
334@cindex comments
335@cindex line comments
336@cindex block comments
337All comments are replaced with single spaces.
338
339There are two kinds of comments.  @dfn{Block comments} begin with
340@samp{/*} and continue until the next @samp{*/}.  Block comments do not
341nest:
342
343@example
344/* @r{this is} /* @r{one comment} */ @r{text outside comment}
345@end example
346
347@dfn{Line comments} begin with @samp{//} and continue to the end of the
348current line.  Line comments do not nest either, but it does not matter,
349because they would end in the same place anyway.
350
351@example
352// @r{this is} // @r{one comment}
353@r{text outside comment}
354@end example
355@end enumerate
356
357It is safe to put line comments inside block comments, or vice versa.
358
359@example
360@group
361/* @r{block comment}
362   // @r{contains line comment}
363   @r{yet more comment}
364 */ @r{outside comment}
365
366// @r{line comment} /* @r{contains block comment} */
367@end group
368@end example
369
370But beware of commenting out one end of a block comment with a line
371comment.
372
373@example
374@group
375 // @r{l.c.}  /* @r{block comment begins}
376    @r{oops! this isn't a comment anymore} */
377@end group
378@end example
379
380Comments are not recognized within string literals.  @t{@w{"/* blah
381*/"}} is the string constant @samp{@w{/* blah */}}, not an empty string.
382
383Line comments are not in the 1989 edition of the C standard, but they
384are recognized by GCC as an extension.  In C++ and in the 1999 edition
385of the C standard, they are an official part of the language.
386
387Since these transformations happen before all other processing, you can
388split a line mechanically with backslash-newline anywhere.  You can
389comment out the end of a line.  You can continue a line comment onto the
390next line with backslash-newline.  You can even split @samp{/*},
391@samp{*/}, and @samp{//} onto multiple lines with backslash-newline.
392For example:
393
394@example
395@group
396/\
397*
398*/ # /*
399*/ defi\
400ne FO\
401O 10\
40220
403@end group
404@end example
405
406@noindent
407is equivalent to @code{@w{#define FOO 1020}}.  All these tricks are
408extremely confusing and should not be used in code intended to be
409readable.
410
411There is no way to prevent a backslash at the end of a line from being
412interpreted as a backslash-newline.  This cannot affect any correct
413program, however.
414
415@node Tokenization
416@section Tokenization
417
418@cindex tokens
419@cindex preprocessing tokens
420After the textual transformations are finished, the input file is
421converted into a sequence of @dfn{preprocessing tokens}.  These mostly
422correspond to the syntactic tokens used by the C compiler, but there are
423a few differences.  White space separates tokens; it is not itself a
424token of any kind.  Tokens do not have to be separated by white space,
425but it is often necessary to avoid ambiguities.
426
427When faced with a sequence of characters that has more than one possible
428tokenization, the preprocessor is greedy.  It always makes each token,
429starting from the left, as big as possible before moving on to the next
430token.  For instance, @code{a+++++b} is interpreted as
431@code{@w{a ++ ++ + b}}, not as @code{@w{a ++ + ++ b}}, even though the
432latter tokenization could be part of a valid C program and the former
433could not.
434
435Once the input file is broken into tokens, the token boundaries never
436change, except when the @samp{##} preprocessing operator is used to paste
437tokens together.  @xref{Concatenation}.  For example,
438
439@example
440@group
441#define foo() bar
442foo()baz
443     @expansion{} bar baz
444@emph{not}
445     @expansion{} barbaz
446@end group
447@end example
448
449The compiler does not re-tokenize the preprocessor's output.  Each
450preprocessing token becomes one compiler token.
451
452@cindex identifiers
453Preprocessing tokens fall into five broad classes: identifiers,
454preprocessing numbers, string literals, punctuators, and other.  An
455@dfn{identifier} is the same as an identifier in C: any sequence of
456letters, digits, or underscores, which begins with a letter or
457underscore.  Keywords of C have no significance to the preprocessor;
458they are ordinary identifiers.  You can define a macro whose name is a
459keyword, for instance.  The only identifier which can be considered a
460preprocessing keyword is @code{defined}.  @xref{Defined}.
461
462This is mostly true of other languages which use the C preprocessor.
463However, a few of the keywords of C++ are significant even in the
464preprocessor.  @xref{C++ Named Operators}.
465
466In the 1999 C standard, identifiers may contain letters which are not
467part of the ``basic source character set,'' at the implementation's
468discretion (such as accented Latin letters, Greek letters, or Chinese
469ideograms).  This may be done with an extended character set, or the
470@samp{\u} and @samp{\U} escape sequences.  GCC does not presently
471implement either feature in the preprocessor or the compiler.
472
473As an extension, GCC treats @samp{$} as a letter.  This is for
474compatibility with some systems, such as VMS, where @samp{$} is commonly
475used in system-defined function and object names.  @samp{$} is not a
476letter in strictly conforming mode, or if you specify the @option{-$}
477option.  @xref{Invocation}.
478
479@cindex numbers
480@cindex preprocessing numbers
481A @dfn{preprocessing number} has a rather bizarre definition.  The
482category includes all the normal integer and floating point constants
483one expects of C, but also a number of other things one might not
484initially recognize as a number.  Formally, preprocessing numbers begin
485with an optional period, a required decimal digit, and then continue
486with any sequence of letters, digits, underscores, periods, and
487exponents.  Exponents are the two-character sequences @samp{e+},
488@samp{e-}, @samp{E+}, @samp{E-}, @samp{p+}, @samp{p-}, @samp{P+}, and
489@samp{P-}.  (The exponents that begin with @samp{p} or @samp{P} are new
490to C99.  They are used for hexadecimal floating-point constants.)
491
492The purpose of this unusual definition is to isolate the preprocessor
493from the full complexity of numeric constants.  It does not have to
494distinguish between lexically valid and invalid floating-point numbers,
495which is complicated.  The definition also permits you to split an
496identifier at any position and get exactly two tokens, which can then be
497pasted back together with the @samp{##} operator.
498
499It's possible for preprocessing numbers to cause programs to be
500misinterpreted.  For example, @code{0xE+12} is a preprocessing number
501which does not translate to any valid numeric constant, therefore a
502syntax error.  It does not mean @code{@w{0xE + 12}}, which is what you
503might have intended.
504
505@cindex string literals
506@cindex string constants
507@cindex character constants
508@cindex header file names
509@c the @: prevents makeinfo from turning '' into ".
510@dfn{String literals} are string constants, character constants, and
511header file names (the argument of @samp{#include}).@footnote{The C
512standard uses the term @dfn{string literal} to refer only to what we are
513calling @dfn{string constants}.}  String constants and character
514constants are straightforward: @t{"@dots{}"} or @t{'@dots{}'}.  In
515either case embedded quotes should be escaped with a backslash:
516@t{'\'@:'} is the character constant for @samp{'}.  There is no limit on
517the length of a character constant, but the value of a character
518constant that contains more than one character is
519implementation-defined.  @xref{Implementation Details}.
520
521Header file names either look like string constants, @t{"@dots{}"}, or are
522written with angle brackets instead, @t{<@dots{}>}.  In either case,
523backslash is an ordinary character.  There is no way to escape the
524closing quote or angle bracket.  The preprocessor looks for the header
525file in different places depending on which form you use.  @xref{Include
526Operation}.
527
528No string literal may extend past the end of a line.  Older versions
529of GCC accepted multi-line string constants.  You may use continued
530lines instead, or string constant concatenation.  @xref{Differences
531from previous versions}.
532
533@cindex punctuators
534@cindex digraphs
535@cindex alternative tokens
536@dfn{Punctuators} are all the usual bits of punctuation which are
537meaningful to C and C++.  All but three of the punctuation characters in
538ASCII are C punctuators.  The exceptions are @samp{@@}, @samp{$}, and
539@samp{`}.  In addition, all the two- and three-character operators are
540punctuators.  There are also six @dfn{digraphs}, which the C++ standard
541calls @dfn{alternative tokens}, which are merely alternate ways to spell
542other punctuators.  This is a second attempt to work around missing
543punctuation in obsolete systems.  It has no negative side effects,
544unlike trigraphs, but does not cover as much ground.  The digraphs and
545their corresponding normal punctuators are:
546
547@example
548Digraph:        <%  %>  <:  :>  %:  %:%:
549Punctuator:      @{   @}   [   ]   #    ##
550@end example
551
552@cindex other tokens
553Any other single character is considered ``other.'' It is passed on to
554the preprocessor's output unmolested.  The C compiler will almost
555certainly reject source code containing ``other'' tokens.  In ASCII, the
556only other characters are @samp{@@}, @samp{$}, @samp{`}, and control
557characters other than NUL (all bits zero).  (Note that @samp{$} is
558normally considered a letter.)  All characters with the high bit set
559(numeric range 0x7F--0xFF) are also ``other'' in the present
560implementation.  This will change when proper support for international
561character sets is added to GCC@.
562
563NUL is a special case because of the high probability that its
564appearance is accidental, and because it may be invisible to the user
565(many terminals do not display NUL at all).  Within comments, NULs are
566silently ignored, just as any other character would be.  In running
567text, NUL is considered white space.  For example, these two directives
568have the same meaning.
569
570@example
571#define X^@@1
572#define X 1
573@end example
574
575@noindent
576(where @samp{^@@} is ASCII NUL)@.  Within string or character constants,
577NULs are preserved.  In the latter two cases the preprocessor emits a
578warning message.
579
580@node The preprocessing language
581@section The preprocessing language
582@cindex directives
583@cindex preprocessing directives
584@cindex directive line
585@cindex directive name
586
587After tokenization, the stream of tokens may simply be passed straight
588to the compiler's parser.  However, if it contains any operations in the
589@dfn{preprocessing language}, it will be transformed first.  This stage
590corresponds roughly to the standard's ``translation phase 4'' and is
591what most people think of as the preprocessor's job.
592
593The preprocessing language consists of @dfn{directives} to be executed
594and @dfn{macros} to be expanded.  Its primary capabilities are:
595
596@itemize @bullet
597@item
598Inclusion of header files.  These are files of declarations that can be
599substituted into your program.
600
601@item
602Macro expansion.  You can define @dfn{macros}, which are abbreviations
603for arbitrary fragments of C code.  The preprocessor will replace the
604macros with their definitions throughout the program.  Some macros are
605automatically defined for you.
606
607@item
608Conditional compilation.  You can include or exclude parts of the
609program according to various conditions.
610
611@item
612Line control.  If you use a program to combine or rearrange source files
613into an intermediate file which is then compiled, you can use line
614control to inform the compiler where each source line originally came
615from.
616
617@item
618Diagnostics.  You can detect problems at compile time and issue errors
619or warnings.
620@end itemize
621
622There are a few more, less useful, features.
623
624Except for expansion of predefined macros, all these operations are
625triggered with @dfn{preprocessing directives}.  Preprocessing directives
626are lines in your program that start with @samp{#}.  Whitespace is
627allowed before and after the @samp{#}.  The @samp{#} is followed by an
628identifier, the @dfn{directive name}.  It specifies the operation to
629perform.  Directives are commonly referred to as @samp{#@var{name}}
630where @var{name} is the directive name.  For example, @samp{#define} is
631the directive that defines a macro.
632
633The @samp{#} which begins a directive cannot come from a macro
634expansion.  Also, the directive name is not macro expanded.  Thus, if
635@code{foo} is defined as a macro expanding to @code{define}, that does
636not make @samp{#foo} a valid preprocessing directive.
637
638The set of valid directive names is fixed.  Programs cannot define new
639preprocessing directives.
640
641Some directives require arguments; these make up the rest of the
642directive line and must be separated from the directive name by
643whitespace.  For example, @samp{#define} must be followed by a macro
644name and the intended expansion of the macro.
645
646A preprocessing directive cannot cover more than one line.  The line
647may, however, be continued with backslash-newline, or by a block comment
648which extends past the end of the line.  In either case, when the
649directive is processed, the continuations have already been merged with
650the first line to make one long line.
651
652@node Header Files
653@chapter Header Files
654
655@cindex header file
656A header file is a file containing C declarations and macro definitions
657(@pxref{Macros}) to be shared between several source files.  You request
658the use of a header file in your program by @dfn{including} it, with the
659C preprocessing directive @samp{#include}.
660
661Header files serve two purposes.
662
663@itemize @bullet
664@item
665@cindex system header files
666System header files declare the interfaces to parts of the operating
667system.  You include them in your program to supply the definitions and
668declarations you need to invoke system calls and libraries.
669
670@item
671Your own header files contain declarations for interfaces between the
672source files of your program.  Each time you have a group of related
673declarations and macro definitions all or most of which are needed in
674several different source files, it is a good idea to create a header
675file for them.
676@end itemize
677
678Including a header file produces the same results as copying the header
679file into each source file that needs it.  Such copying would be
680time-consuming and error-prone.  With a header file, the related
681declarations appear in only one place.  If they need to be changed, they
682can be changed in one place, and programs that include the header file
683will automatically use the new version when next recompiled.  The header
684file eliminates the labor of finding and changing all the copies as well
685as the risk that a failure to find one copy will result in
686inconsistencies within a program.
687
688In C, the usual convention is to give header files names that end with
689@file{.h}.  It is most portable to use only letters, digits, dashes, and
690underscores in header file names, and at most one dot.
691
692@menu
693* Include Syntax::
694* Include Operation::
695* Search Path::
696* Once-Only Headers::
697* Computed Includes::
698* Wrapper Headers::
699* System Headers::
700@end menu
701
702@node Include Syntax
703@section Include Syntax
704
705@findex #include
706Both user and system header files are included using the preprocessing
707directive @samp{#include}.  It has two variants:
708
709@table @code
710@item #include <@var{file}>
711This variant is used for system header files.  It searches for a file
712named @var{file} in a standard list of system directories.  You can prepend
713directories to this list with the @option{-I} option (@pxref{Invocation}).
714
715@item #include "@var{file}"
716This variant is used for header files of your own program.  It searches
717for a file named @var{file} first in the directory containing the
718current file, then in the same directories used for @code{<@var{file}>}.
719@end table
720
721The argument of @samp{#include}, whether delimited with quote marks or
722angle brackets, behaves like a string constant in that comments are not
723recognized, and macro names are not expanded.  Thus, @code{@w{#include
724<x/*y>}} specifies inclusion of a system header file named @file{x/*y}.
725
726However, if backslashes occur within @var{file}, they are considered
727ordinary text characters, not escape characters.  None of the character
728escape sequences appropriate to string constants in C are processed.
729Thus, @code{@w{#include "x\n\\y"}} specifies a filename containing three
730backslashes.  (Some systems interpret @samp{\} as a pathname separator.
731All of these also interpret @samp{/} the same way.  It is most portable
732to use only @samp{/}.)
733
734It is an error if there is anything (other than comments) on the line
735after the file name.
736
737@node Include Operation
738@section Include Operation
739
740The @samp{#include} directive works by directing the C preprocessor to
741scan the specified file as input before continuing with the rest of the
742current file.  The output from the preprocessor contains the output
743already generated, followed by the output resulting from the included
744file, followed by the output that comes from the text after the
745@samp{#include} directive.  For example, if you have a header file
746@file{header.h} as follows,
747
748@example
749char *test (void);
750@end example
751
752@noindent
753and a main program called @file{program.c} that uses the header file,
754like this,
755
756@example
757int x;
758#include "header.h"
759
760int
761main (void)
762@{
763  puts (test ());
764@}
765@end example
766
767@noindent
768the compiler will see the same token stream as it would if
769@file{program.c} read
770
771@example
772int x;
773char *test (void);
774
775int
776main (void)
777@{
778  puts (test ());
779@}
780@end example
781
782Included files are not limited to declarations and macro definitions;
783those are merely the typical uses.  Any fragment of a C program can be
784included from another file.  The include file could even contain the
785beginning of a statement that is concluded in the containing file, or
786the end of a statement that was started in the including file.  However,
787an included file must consist of complete tokens.  Comments and string
788literals which have not been closed by the end of an included file are
789invalid.  For error recovery, they are considered to end at the end of
790the file.
791
792To avoid confusion, it is best if header files contain only complete
793syntactic units---function declarations or definitions, type
794declarations, etc.
795
796The line following the @samp{#include} directive is always treated as a
797separate line by the C preprocessor, even if the included file lacks a
798final newline.
799
800@node Search Path
801@section Search Path
802
803GCC looks in several different places for headers.  On a normal Unix
804system, if you do not instruct it otherwise, it will look for headers
805requested with @code{@w{#include <@var{file}>}} in:
806
807@example
808/usr/local/include
809/usr/lib/gcc-lib/@var{target}/@var{version}/include
810/usr/@var{target}/include
811/usr/include
812@end example
813
814For C++ programs, it will also look in @file{/usr/include/g++-v3},
815first.  In the above, @var{target} is the canonical name of the system
816GCC was configured to compile code for; often but not always the same as
817the canonical name of the system it runs on.  @var{version} is the
818version of GCC in use.
819
820You can add to this list with the @option{-I@var{dir}} command line
821option.  All the directories named by @option{-I} are searched, in
822left-to-right order, @emph{before} the default directories.  The only
823exception is when @file{dir} is already searched by default.  In
824this case, the option is ignored and the search order for system
825directories remains unchanged.
826
827Duplicate directories are removed from the quote and bracket search
828chains before the two chains are merged to make the final search chain.
829Thus, it is possible for a directory to occur twice in the final search
830chain if it was specified in both the quote and bracket chains.
831
832You can prevent GCC from searching any of the default directories with
833the @option{-nostdinc} option.  This is useful when you are compiling an
834operating system kernel or some other program that does not use the
835standard C library facilities, or the standard C library itself.
836@option{-I} options are not ignored as described above when
837@option{-nostdinc} is in effect.
838
839GCC looks for headers requested with @code{@w{#include "@var{file}"}}
840first in the directory containing the current file, then in the same
841places it would have looked for a header requested with angle brackets.
842For example, if @file{/usr/include/sys/stat.h} contains
843@code{@w{#include "types.h"}}, GCC looks for @file{types.h} first in
844@file{/usr/include/sys}, then in its usual search path.
845
846@samp{#line} (@pxref{Line Control}) does not change GCC's idea of the
847directory containing the current file.
848
849You may put @option{-I-} at any point in your list of @option{-I} options.
850This has two effects.  First, directories appearing before the
851@option{-I-} in the list are searched only for headers requested with
852quote marks.  Directories after @option{-I-} are searched for all
853headers.  Second, the directory containing the current file is not
854searched for anything, unless it happens to be one of the directories
855named by an @option{-I} switch.
856
857@option{-I. -I-} is not the same as no @option{-I} options at all, and does
858not cause the same behavior for @samp{<>} includes that @samp{""}
859includes get with no special options.  @option{-I.} searches the
860compiler's current working directory for header files.  That may or may
861not be the same as the directory containing the current file.
862
863If you need to look for headers in a directory named @file{-}, write
864@option{-I./-}.
865
866There are several more ways to adjust the header search path.  They are
867generally less useful.  @xref{Invocation}.
868
869@node Once-Only Headers
870@section Once-Only Headers
871@cindex repeated inclusion
872@cindex including just once
873@cindex wrapper @code{#ifndef}
874
875If a header file happens to be included twice, the compiler will process
876its contents twice.  This is very likely to cause an error, e.g.@: when the
877compiler sees the same structure definition twice.  Even if it does not,
878it will certainly waste time.
879
880The standard way to prevent this is to enclose the entire real contents
881of the file in a conditional, like this:
882
883@example
884@group
885/* File foo.  */
886#ifndef FILE_FOO_SEEN
887#define FILE_FOO_SEEN
888
889@var{the entire file}
890
891#endif /* !FILE_FOO_SEEN */
892@end group
893@end example
894
895This construct is commonly known as a @dfn{wrapper #ifndef}.
896When the header is included again, the conditional will be false,
897because @code{FILE_FOO_SEEN} is defined.  The preprocessor will skip
898over the entire contents of the file, and the compiler will not see it
899twice.
900
901CPP optimizes even further.  It remembers when a header file has a
902wrapper @samp{#ifndef}.  If a subsequent @samp{#include} specifies that
903header, and the macro in the @samp{#ifndef} is still defined, it does
904not bother to rescan the file at all.
905
906You can put comments outside the wrapper.  They will not interfere with
907this optimization.
908
909@cindex controlling macro
910@cindex guard macro
911The macro @code{FILE_FOO_SEEN} is called the @dfn{controlling macro} or
912@dfn{guard macro}.  In a user header file, the macro name should not
913begin with @samp{_}.  In a system header file, it should begin with
914@samp{__} to avoid conflicts with user programs.  In any kind of header
915file, the macro name should contain the name of the file and some
916additional text, to avoid conflicts with other header files.
917
918@node Computed Includes
919@section Computed Includes
920@cindex computed includes
921@cindex macros in include
922
923Sometimes it is necessary to select one of several different header
924files to be included into your program.  They might specify
925configuration parameters to be used on different sorts of operating
926systems, for instance.  You could do this with a series of conditionals,
927
928@example
929#if SYSTEM_1
930# include "system_1.h"
931#elif SYSTEM_2
932# include "system_2.h"
933#elif SYSTEM_3
934@dots{}
935#endif
936@end example
937
938That rapidly becomes tedious.  Instead, the preprocessor offers the
939ability to use a macro for the header name.  This is called a
940@dfn{computed include}.  Instead of writing a header name as the direct
941argument of @samp{#include}, you simply put a macro name there instead:
942
943@example
944#define SYSTEM_H "system_1.h"
945@dots{}
946#include SYSTEM_H
947@end example
948
949@noindent
950@code{SYSTEM_H} will be expanded, and the preprocessor will look for
951@file{system_1.h} as if the @samp{#include} had been written that way
952originally.  @code{SYSTEM_H} could be defined by your Makefile with a
953@option{-D} option.
954
955You must be careful when you define the macro.  @samp{#define} saves
956tokens, not text.  The preprocessor has no way of knowing that the macro
957will be used as the argument of @samp{#include}, so it generates
958ordinary tokens, not a header name.  This is unlikely to cause problems
959if you use double-quote includes, which are close enough to string
960constants.  If you use angle brackets, however, you may have trouble.
961
962The syntax of a computed include is actually a bit more general than the
963above.  If the first non-whitespace character after @samp{#include} is
964not @samp{"} or @samp{<}, then the entire line is macro-expanded
965like running text would be.
966
967If the line expands to a single string constant, the contents of that
968string constant are the file to be included.  CPP does not re-examine the
969string for embedded quotes, but neither does it process backslash
970escapes in the string.  Therefore
971
972@example
973#define HEADER "a\"b"
974#include HEADER
975@end example
976
977@noindent
978looks for a file named @file{a\"b}.  CPP searches for the file according
979to the rules for double-quoted includes.
980
981If the line expands to a token stream beginning with a @samp{<} token
982and including a @samp{>} token, then the tokens between the @samp{<} and
983the first @samp{>} are combined to form the filename to be included.
984Any whitespace between tokens is reduced to a single space; then any
985space after the initial @samp{<} is retained, but a trailing space
986before the closing @samp{>} is ignored.  CPP searches for the file
987according to the rules for angle-bracket includes.
988
989In either case, if there are any tokens on the line after the file name,
990an error occurs and the directive is not processed.  It is also an error
991if the result of expansion does not match either of the two expected
992forms.
993
994These rules are implementation-defined behavior according to the C
995standard.  To minimize the risk of different compilers interpreting your
996computed includes differently, we recommend you use only a single
997object-like macro which expands to a string constant.  This will also
998minimize confusion for people reading your program.
999
1000@node Wrapper Headers
1001@section Wrapper Headers
1002@cindex wrapper headers
1003@cindex overriding a header file
1004@findex #include_next
1005
1006Sometimes it is necessary to adjust the contents of a system-provided
1007header file without editing it directly.  GCC's @command{fixincludes}
1008operation does this, for example.  One way to do that would be to create
1009a new header file with the same name and insert it in the search path
1010before the original header.  That works fine as long as you're willing
1011to replace the old header entirely.  But what if you want to refer to
1012the old header from the new one?
1013
1014You cannot simply include the old header with @samp{#include}.  That
1015will start from the beginning, and find your new header again.  If your
1016header is not protected from multiple inclusion (@pxref{Once-Only
1017Headers}), it will recurse infinitely and cause a fatal error.
1018
1019You could include the old header with an absolute pathname:
1020@example
1021#include "/usr/include/old-header.h"
1022@end example
1023@noindent
1024This works, but is not clean; should the system headers ever move, you
1025would have to edit the new headers to match.
1026
1027There is no way to solve this problem within the C standard, but you can
1028use the GNU extension @samp{#include_next}.  It means, ``Include the
1029@emph{next} file with this name.''  This directive works like
1030@samp{#include} except in searching for the specified file: it starts
1031searching the list of header file directories @emph{after} the directory
1032in which the current file was found.
1033
1034Suppose you specify @option{-I /usr/local/include}, and the list of
1035directories to search also includes @file{/usr/include}; and suppose
1036both directories contain @file{signal.h}.  Ordinary @code{@w{#include
1037<signal.h>}} finds the file under @file{/usr/local/include}.  If that
1038file contains @code{@w{#include_next <signal.h>}}, it starts searching
1039after that directory, and finds the file in @file{/usr/include}.
1040
1041@samp{#include_next} does not distinguish between @code{<@var{file}>}
1042and @code{"@var{file}"} inclusion, nor does it check that the file you
1043specify has the same name as the current file.  It simply looks for the
1044file named, starting with the directory in the search path after the one
1045where the current file was found.
1046
1047The use of @samp{#include_next} can lead to great confusion.  We
1048recommend it be used only when there is no other alternative.  In
1049particular, it should not be used in the headers belonging to a specific
1050program; it should be used only to make global corrections along the
1051lines of @command{fixincludes}.
1052
1053@node System Headers
1054@section System Headers
1055@cindex system header files
1056
1057The header files declaring interfaces to the operating system and
1058runtime libraries often cannot be written in strictly conforming C@.
1059Therefore, GCC gives code found in @dfn{system headers} special
1060treatment.  All warnings, other than those generated by @samp{#warning}
1061(@pxref{Diagnostics}), are suppressed while GCC is processing a system
1062header.  Macros defined in a system header are immune to a few warnings
1063wherever they are expanded.  This immunity is granted on an ad-hoc
1064basis, when we find that a warning generates lots of false positives
1065because of code in macros defined in system headers.
1066
1067Normally, only the headers found in specific directories are considered
1068system headers.  These directories are determined when GCC is compiled.
1069There are, however, two ways to make normal headers into system headers.
1070
1071The @option{-isystem} command line option adds its argument to the list of
1072directories to search for headers, just like @option{-I}.  Any headers
1073found in that directory will be considered system headers.
1074
1075All directories named by @option{-isystem} are searched @emph{after} all
1076directories named by @option{-I}, no matter what their order was on the
1077command line.  If the same directory is named by both @option{-I} and
1078@option{-isystem}, the @option{-I} option is ignored.  GCC provides an
1079informative message when this occurs if @option{-v} is used.
1080
1081@findex #pragma GCC system_header
1082There is also a directive, @code{@w{#pragma GCC system_header}}, which
1083tells GCC to consider the rest of the current include file a system
1084header, no matter where it was found.  Code that comes before the
1085@samp{#pragma} in the file will not be affected.  @code{@w{#pragma GCC
1086system_header}} has no effect in the primary source file.
1087
1088On very old systems, some of the pre-defined system header directories
1089get even more special treatment.  GNU C++ considers code in headers
1090found in those directories to be surrounded by an @code{@w{extern "C"}}
1091block.  There is no way to request this behavior with a @samp{#pragma},
1092or from the command line.
1093
1094@node Macros
1095@chapter Macros
1096
1097A @dfn{macro} is a fragment of code which has been given a name.
1098Whenever the name is used, it is replaced by the contents of the macro.
1099There are two kinds of macros.  They differ mostly in what they look
1100like when they are used.  @dfn{Object-like} macros resemble data objects
1101when used, @dfn{function-like} macros resemble function calls.
1102
1103You may define any valid identifier as a macro, even if it is a C
1104keyword.  The preprocessor does not know anything about keywords.  This
1105can be useful if you wish to hide a keyword such as @code{const} from an
1106older compiler that does not understand it.  However, the preprocessor
1107operator @code{defined} (@pxref{Defined}) can never be defined as a
1108macro, and C++'s named operators (@pxref{C++ Named Operators}) cannot be
1109macros when you are compiling C++.
1110
1111@menu
1112* Object-like Macros::
1113* Function-like Macros::
1114* Macro Arguments::
1115* Stringification::
1116* Concatenation::
1117* Variadic Macros::
1118* Predefined Macros::
1119* Undefining and Redefining Macros::
1120* Directives Within Macro Arguments::
1121* Macro Pitfalls::
1122@end menu
1123
1124@node Object-like Macros
1125@section Object-like Macros
1126@cindex object-like macro
1127@cindex symbolic constants
1128@cindex manifest constants
1129
1130An @dfn{object-like macro} is a simple identifier which will be replaced
1131by a code fragment.  It is called object-like because it looks like a
1132data object in code that uses it.  They are most commonly used to give
1133symbolic names to numeric constants.
1134
1135@findex #define
1136You create macros with the @samp{#define} directive.  @samp{#define} is
1137followed by the name of the macro and then the token sequence it should
1138be an abbreviation for, which is variously referred to as the macro's
1139@dfn{body}, @dfn{expansion} or @dfn{replacement list}.  For example,
1140
1141@example
1142#define BUFFER_SIZE 1024
1143@end example
1144
1145@noindent
1146defines a macro named @code{BUFFER_SIZE} as an abbreviation for the
1147token @code{1024}.  If somewhere after this @samp{#define} directive
1148there comes a C statement of the form
1149
1150@example
1151foo = (char *) malloc (BUFFER_SIZE);
1152@end example
1153
1154@noindent
1155then the C preprocessor will recognize and @dfn{expand} the macro
1156@code{BUFFER_SIZE}.  The C compiler will see the same tokens as it would
1157if you had written
1158
1159@example
1160foo = (char *) malloc (1024);
1161@end example
1162
1163By convention, macro names are written in upper case.  Programs are
1164easier to read when it is possible to tell at a glance which names are
1165macros.
1166
1167The macro's body ends at the end of the @samp{#define} line.  You may
1168continue the definition onto multiple lines, if necessary, using
1169backslash-newline.  When the macro is expanded, however, it will all
1170come out on one line.  For example,
1171
1172@example
1173#define NUMBERS 1, \
1174                2, \
1175                3
1176int x[] = @{ NUMBERS @};
1177     @expansion{} int x[] = @{ 1, 2, 3 @};
1178@end example
1179
1180@noindent
1181The most common visible consequence of this is surprising line numbers
1182in error messages.
1183
1184There is no restriction on what can go in a macro body provided it
1185decomposes into valid preprocessing tokens.  Parentheses need not
1186balance, and the body need not resemble valid C code.  (If it does not,
1187you may get error messages from the C compiler when you use the macro.)
1188
1189The C preprocessor scans your program sequentially.  Macro definitions
1190take effect at the place you write them.  Therefore, the following input
1191to the C preprocessor
1192
1193@example
1194foo = X;
1195#define X 4
1196bar = X;
1197@end example
1198
1199@noindent
1200produces
1201
1202@example
1203foo = X;
1204bar = 4;
1205@end example
1206
1207When the preprocessor expands a macro name, the macro's expansion
1208replaces the macro invocation, then the expansion is examined for more
1209macros to expand.  For example,
1210
1211@example
1212@group
1213#define TABLESIZE BUFSIZE
1214#define BUFSIZE 1024
1215TABLESIZE
1216     @expansion{} BUFSIZE
1217     @expansion{} 1024
1218@end group
1219@end example
1220
1221@noindent
1222@code{TABLESIZE} is expanded first to produce @code{BUFSIZE}, then that
1223macro is expanded to produce the final result, @code{1024}.
1224
1225Notice that @code{BUFSIZE} was not defined when @code{TABLESIZE} was
1226defined.  The @samp{#define} for @code{TABLESIZE} uses exactly the
1227expansion you specify---in this case, @code{BUFSIZE}---and does not
1228check to see whether it too contains macro names.  Only when you
1229@emph{use} @code{TABLESIZE} is the result of its expansion scanned for
1230more macro names.
1231
1232This makes a difference if you change the definition of @code{BUFSIZE}
1233at some point in the source file.  @code{TABLESIZE}, defined as shown,
1234will always expand using the definition of @code{BUFSIZE} that is
1235currently in effect:
1236
1237@example
1238#define BUFSIZE 1020
1239#define TABLESIZE BUFSIZE
1240#undef BUFSIZE
1241#define BUFSIZE 37
1242@end example
1243
1244@noindent
1245Now @code{TABLESIZE} expands (in two stages) to @code{37}.
1246
1247If the expansion of a macro contains its own name, either directly or
1248via intermediate macros, it is not expanded again when the expansion is
1249examined for more macros.  This prevents infinite recursion.
1250@xref{Self-Referential Macros}, for the precise details.
1251
1252@node Function-like Macros
1253@section Function-like Macros
1254@cindex function-like macros
1255
1256You can also define macros whose use looks like a function call.  These
1257are called @dfn{function-like macros}.  To define a function-like macro,
1258you use the same @samp{#define} directive, but you put a pair of
1259parentheses immediately after the macro name.  For example,
1260
1261@example
1262#define lang_init()  c_init()
1263lang_init()
1264     @expansion{} c_init()
1265@end example
1266
1267A function-like macro is only expanded if its name appears with a pair
1268of parentheses after it.  If you write just the name, it is left alone.
1269This can be useful when you have a function and a macro of the same
1270name, and you wish to use the function sometimes.
1271
1272@example
1273extern void foo(void);
1274#define foo() /* optimized inline version */
1275@dots{}
1276  foo();
1277  funcptr = foo;
1278@end example
1279
1280Here the call to @code{foo()} will use the macro, but the function
1281pointer will get the address of the real function.  If the macro were to
1282be expanded, it would cause a syntax error.
1283
1284If you put spaces between the macro name and the parentheses in the
1285macro definition, that does not define a function-like macro, it defines
1286an object-like macro whose expansion happens to begin with a pair of
1287parentheses.
1288
1289@example
1290#define lang_init ()    c_init()
1291lang_init()
1292     @expansion{} () c_init()()
1293@end example
1294
1295The first two pairs of parentheses in this expansion come from the
1296macro.  The third is the pair that was originally after the macro
1297invocation.  Since @code{lang_init} is an object-like macro, it does not
1298consume those parentheses.
1299
1300@node Macro Arguments
1301@section Macro Arguments
1302@cindex arguments
1303@cindex macros with arguments
1304@cindex arguments in macro definitions
1305
1306Function-like macros can take @dfn{arguments}, just like true functions.
1307To define a macro that uses arguments, you insert @dfn{parameters}
1308between the pair of parentheses in the macro definition that make the
1309macro function-like.  The parameters must be valid C identifiers,
1310separated by commas and optionally whitespace.
1311
1312To invoke a macro that takes arguments, you write the name of the macro
1313followed by a list of @dfn{actual arguments} in parentheses, separated
1314by commas.  The invocation of the macro need not be restricted to a
1315single logical line---it can cross as many lines in the source file as
1316you wish.  The number of arguments you give must match the number of
1317parameters in the macro definition.  When the macro is expanded, each
1318use of a parameter in its body is replaced by the tokens of the
1319corresponding argument.  (You need not use all of the parameters in the
1320macro body.)
1321
1322As an example, here is a macro that computes the minimum of two numeric
1323values, as it is defined in many C programs, and some uses.
1324
1325@example
1326#define min(X, Y)  ((X) < (Y) ? (X) : (Y))
1327  x = min(a, b);          @expansion{}  x = ((a) < (b) ? (a) : (b));
1328  y = min(1, 2);          @expansion{}  y = ((1) < (2) ? (1) : (2));
1329  z = min(a + 28, *p);    @expansion{}  z = ((a + 28) < (*p) ? (a + 28) : (*p));
1330@end example
1331
1332@noindent
1333(In this small example you can already see several of the dangers of
1334macro arguments.  @xref{Macro Pitfalls}, for detailed explanations.)
1335
1336Leading and trailing whitespace in each argument is dropped, and all
1337whitespace between the tokens of an argument is reduced to a single
1338space.  Parentheses within each argument must balance; a comma within
1339such parentheses does not end the argument.  However, there is no
1340requirement for square brackets or braces to balance, and they do not
1341prevent a comma from separating arguments.  Thus,
1342
1343@example
1344macro (array[x = y, x + 1])
1345@end example
1346
1347@noindent
1348passes two arguments to @code{macro}: @code{array[x = y} and @code{x +
13491]}.  If you want to supply @code{array[x = y, x + 1]} as an argument,
1350you can write it as @code{array[(x = y, x + 1)]}, which is equivalent C
1351code.
1352
1353All arguments to a macro are completely macro-expanded before they are
1354substituted into the macro body.  After substitution, the complete text
1355is scanned again for macros to expand, including the arguments.  This rule
1356may seem strange, but it is carefully designed so you need not worry
1357about whether any function call is actually a macro invocation.  You can
1358run into trouble if you try to be too clever, though.  @xref{Argument
1359Prescan}, for detailed discussion.
1360
1361For example, @code{min (min (a, b), c)} is first expanded to
1362
1363@example
1364  min (((a) < (b) ? (a) : (b)), (c))
1365@end example
1366
1367@noindent
1368and then to
1369
1370@example
1371@group
1372((((a) < (b) ? (a) : (b))) < (c)
1373 ? (((a) < (b) ? (a) : (b)))
1374 : (c))
1375@end group
1376@end example
1377
1378@noindent
1379(Line breaks shown here for clarity would not actually be generated.)
1380
1381@cindex empty macro arguments
1382You can leave macro arguments empty; this is not an error to the
1383preprocessor (but many macros will then expand to invalid code).
1384You cannot leave out arguments entirely; if a macro takes two arguments,
1385there must be exactly one comma at the top level of its argument list.
1386Here are some silly examples using @code{min}:
1387
1388@example
1389min(, b)        @expansion{} ((   ) < (b) ? (   ) : (b))
1390min(a, )        @expansion{} ((a  ) < ( ) ? (a  ) : ( ))
1391min(,)          @expansion{} ((   ) < ( ) ? (   ) : ( ))
1392min((,),)       @expansion{} (((,)) < ( ) ? ((,)) : ( ))
1393
1394min()      @error{} macro "min" requires 2 arguments, but only 1 given
1395min(,,)    @error{} macro "min" passed 3 arguments, but takes just 2
1396@end example
1397
1398Whitespace is not a preprocessing token, so if a macro @code{foo} takes
1399one argument, @code{@w{foo ()}} and @code{@w{foo ( )}} both supply it an
1400empty argument.  Previous GNU preprocessor implementations and
1401documentation were incorrect on this point, insisting that a
1402function-like macro that takes a single argument be passed a space if an
1403empty argument was required.
1404
1405Macro parameters appearing inside string literals are not replaced by
1406their corresponding actual arguments.
1407
1408@example
1409#define foo(x) x, "x"
1410foo(bar)        @expansion{} bar, "x"
1411@end example
1412
1413@node Stringification
1414@section Stringification
1415@cindex stringification
1416@cindex @samp{#} operator
1417
1418Sometimes you may want to convert a macro argument into a string
1419constant.  Parameters are not replaced inside string constants, but you
1420can use the @samp{#} preprocessing operator instead.  When a macro
1421parameter is used with a leading @samp{#}, the preprocessor replaces it
1422with the literal text of the actual argument, converted to a string
1423constant.  Unlike normal parameter replacement, the argument is not
1424macro-expanded first.  This is called @dfn{stringification}.
1425
1426There is no way to combine an argument with surrounding text and
1427stringify it all together.  Instead, you can write a series of adjacent
1428string constants and stringified arguments.  The preprocessor will
1429replace the stringified arguments with string constants.  The C
1430compiler will then combine all the adjacent string constants into one
1431long string.
1432
1433Here is an example of a macro definition that uses stringification:
1434
1435@example
1436@group
1437#define WARN_IF(EXP) \
1438do @{ if (EXP) \
1439        fprintf (stderr, "Warning: " #EXP "\n"); @} \
1440while (0)
1441WARN_IF (x == 0);
1442     @expansion{} do @{ if (x == 0)
1443           fprintf (stderr, "Warning: " "x == 0" "\n"); @} while (0);
1444@end group
1445@end example
1446
1447@noindent
1448The argument for @code{EXP} is substituted once, as-is, into the
1449@code{if} statement, and once, stringified, into the argument to
1450@code{fprintf}.  If @code{x} were a macro, it would be expanded in the
1451@code{if} statement, but not in the string.
1452
1453The @code{do} and @code{while (0)} are a kludge to make it possible to
1454write @code{WARN_IF (@var{arg});}, which the resemblance of
1455@code{WARN_IF} to a function would make C programmers want to do; see
1456@ref{Swallowing the Semicolon}.
1457
1458Stringification in C involves more than putting double-quote characters
1459around the fragment.  The preprocessor backslash-escapes the quotes
1460surrounding embedded string constants, and all backslashes within string and
1461character constants, in order to get a valid C string constant with the
1462proper contents.  Thus, stringifying @code{@w{p = "foo\n";}} results in
1463@t{@w{"p = \"foo\\n\";"}}.  However, backslashes that are not inside string
1464or character constants are not duplicated: @samp{\n} by itself
1465stringifies to @t{"\n"}.
1466
1467All leading and trailing whitespace in text being stringified is
1468ignored.  Any sequence of whitespace in the middle of the text is
1469converted to a single space in the stringified result.  Comments are
1470replaced by whitespace long before stringification happens, so they
1471never appear in stringified text.
1472
1473There is no way to convert a macro argument into a character constant.
1474
1475If you want to stringify the result of expansion of a macro argument,
1476you have to use two levels of macros.
1477
1478@example
1479#define xstr(s) str(s)
1480#define str(s) #s
1481#define foo 4
1482str (foo)
1483     @expansion{} "foo"
1484xstr (foo)
1485     @expansion{} xstr (4)
1486     @expansion{} str (4)
1487     @expansion{} "4"
1488@end example
1489
1490@code{s} is stringified when it is used in @code{str}, so it is not
1491macro-expanded first.  But @code{s} is an ordinary argument to
1492@code{xstr}, so it is completely macro-expanded before @code{xstr}
1493itself is expanded (@pxref{Argument Prescan}).  Therefore, by the time
1494@code{str} gets to its argument, it has already been macro-expanded.
1495
1496@node Concatenation
1497@section Concatenation
1498@cindex concatenation
1499@cindex token pasting
1500@cindex token concatenation
1501@cindex @samp{##} operator
1502
1503It is often useful to merge two tokens into one while expanding macros.
1504This is called @dfn{token pasting} or @dfn{token concatenation}.  The
1505@samp{##} preprocessing operator performs token pasting.  When a macro
1506is expanded, the two tokens on either side of each @samp{##} operator
1507are combined into a single token, which then replaces the @samp{##} and
1508the two original tokens in the macro expansion.  Usually both will be
1509identifiers, or one will be an identifier and the other a preprocessing
1510number.  When pasted, they make a longer identifier.  This isn't the
1511only valid case.  It is also possible to concatenate two numbers (or a
1512number and a name, such as @code{1.5} and @code{e3}) into a number.
1513Also, multi-character operators such as @code{+=} can be formed by
1514token pasting.
1515
1516However, two tokens that don't together form a valid token cannot be
1517pasted together.  For example, you cannot concatenate @code{x} with
1518@code{+} in either order.  If you try, the preprocessor issues a warning
1519and emits the two tokens.  Whether it puts white space between the
1520tokens is undefined.  It is common to find unnecessary uses of @samp{##}
1521in complex macros.  If you get this warning, it is likely that you can
1522simply remove the @samp{##}.
1523
1524Both the tokens combined by @samp{##} could come from the macro body,
1525but you could just as well write them as one token in the first place.
1526Token pasting is most useful when one or both of the tokens comes from a
1527macro argument.  If either of the tokens next to an @samp{##} is a
1528parameter name, it is replaced by its actual argument before @samp{##}
1529executes.  As with stringification, the actual argument is not
1530macro-expanded first.  If the argument is empty, that @samp{##} has no
1531effect.
1532
1533Keep in mind that the C preprocessor converts comments to whitespace
1534before macros are even considered.  Therefore, you cannot create a
1535comment by concatenating @samp{/} and @samp{*}.  You can put as much
1536whitespace between @samp{##} and its operands as you like, including
1537comments, and you can put comments in arguments that will be
1538concatenated.  However, it is an error if @samp{##} appears at either
1539end of a macro body.
1540
1541Consider a C program that interprets named commands.  There probably
1542needs to be a table of commands, perhaps an array of structures declared
1543as follows:
1544
1545@example
1546@group
1547struct command
1548@{
1549  char *name;
1550  void (*function) (void);
1551@};
1552@end group
1553
1554@group
1555struct command commands[] =
1556@{
1557  @{ "quit", quit_command @},
1558  @{ "help", help_command @},
1559  @dots{}
1560@};
1561@end group
1562@end example
1563
1564It would be cleaner not to have to give each command name twice, once in
1565the string constant and once in the function name.  A macro which takes the
1566name of a command as an argument can make this unnecessary.  The string
1567constant can be created with stringification, and the function name by
1568concatenating the argument with @samp{_command}.  Here is how it is done:
1569
1570@example
1571#define COMMAND(NAME)  @{ #NAME, NAME ## _command @}
1572
1573struct command commands[] =
1574@{
1575  COMMAND (quit),
1576  COMMAND (help),
1577  @dots{}
1578@};
1579@end example
1580
1581@node Variadic Macros
1582@section Variadic Macros
1583@cindex variable number of arguments
1584@cindex macros with variable arguments
1585@cindex variadic macros
1586
1587A macro can be declared to accept a variable number of arguments much as
1588a function can.  The syntax for defining the macro is similar to that of
1589a function.  Here is an example:
1590
1591@example
1592#define eprintf(@dots{}) fprintf (stderr, __VA_ARGS__)
1593@end example
1594
1595This kind of macro is called @dfn{variadic}.  When the macro is invoked,
1596all the tokens in its argument list after the last named argument (this
1597macro has none), including any commas, become the @dfn{variable
1598argument}.  This sequence of tokens replaces the identifier
1599@code{@w{__VA_ARGS__}} in the macro body wherever it appears.  Thus, we
1600have this expansion:
1601
1602@example
1603eprintf ("%s:%d: ", input_file, lineno)
1604     @expansion{}  fprintf (stderr, "%s:%d: ", input_file, lineno)
1605@end example
1606
1607The variable argument is completely macro-expanded before it is inserted
1608into the macro expansion, just like an ordinary argument.  You may use
1609the @samp{#} and @samp{##} operators to stringify the variable argument
1610or to paste its leading or trailing token with another token.  (But see
1611below for an important special case for @samp{##}.)
1612
1613If your macro is complicated, you may want a more descriptive name for
1614the variable argument than @code{@w{__VA_ARGS__}}.  CPP permits
1615this, as an extension.  You may write an argument name immediately
1616before the @samp{@dots{}}; that name is used for the variable argument.
1617The @code{eprintf} macro above could be written
1618
1619@example
1620#define eprintf(args@dots{}) fprintf (stderr, args)
1621@end example
1622
1623@noindent
1624using this extension.  You cannot use @code{@w{__VA_ARGS__}} and this
1625extension in the same macro.
1626
1627You can have named arguments as well as variable arguments in a variadic
1628macro.  We could define @code{eprintf} like this, instead:
1629
1630@example
1631#define eprintf(format, @dots{}) fprintf (stderr, format, __VA_ARGS__)
1632@end example
1633
1634@noindent
1635This formulation looks more descriptive, but unfortunately it is less
1636flexible: you must now supply at least one argument after the format
1637string.  In standard C, you cannot omit the comma separating the named
1638argument from the variable arguments.  Furthermore, if you leave the
1639variable argument empty, you will get a syntax error, because
1640there will be an extra comma after the format string.
1641
1642@example
1643eprintf("success!\n", );
1644     @expansion{} fprintf(stderr, "success!\n", );
1645@end example
1646
1647GNU CPP has a pair of extensions which deal with this problem.  First,
1648you are allowed to leave the variable argument out entirely:
1649
1650@example
1651eprintf ("success!\n")
1652     @expansion{} fprintf(stderr, "success!\n", );
1653@end example
1654
1655@noindent
1656Second, the @samp{##} token paste operator has a special meaning when
1657placed between a comma and a variable argument.  If you write
1658
1659@example
1660#define eprintf(format, @dots{}) fprintf (stderr, format, ##__VA_ARGS__)
1661@end example
1662
1663@noindent
1664and the variable argument is left out when the @code{eprintf} macro is
1665used, then the comma before the @samp{##} will be deleted.  This does
1666@emph{not} happen if you pass an empty argument, nor does it happen if
1667the token preceding @samp{##} is anything other than a comma.
1668
1669@example
1670eprintf ("success!\n")
1671     @expansion{} fprintf(stderr, "success!\n");
1672@end example
1673
1674@noindent
1675The above explanation is ambiguous about the case where the only macro
1676parameter is a variable arguments parameter, as it is meaningless to
1677try to distinguish whether no argument at all is an empty argument or
1678a missing argument.  In this case the C99 standard is clear that the
1679comma must remain, however the existing GCC extension used to swallow
1680the comma.  So CPP retains the comma when conforming to a specific C
1681standard, and drops it otherwise.
1682
1683C99 mandates that the only place the identifier @code{@w{__VA_ARGS__}}
1684can appear is in the replacement list of a variadic macro.  It may not
1685be used as a macro name, macro argument name, or within a different type
1686of macro.  It may also be forbidden in open text; the standard is
1687ambiguous.  We recommend you avoid using it except for its defined
1688purpose.
1689
1690Variadic macros are a new feature in C99.  GNU CPP has supported them
1691for a long time, but only with a named variable argument
1692(@samp{args@dots{}}, not @samp{@dots{}} and @code{@w{__VA_ARGS__}}).  If you are
1693concerned with portability to previous versions of GCC, you should use
1694only named variable arguments.  On the other hand, if you are concerned
1695with portability to other conforming implementations of C99, you should
1696use only @code{@w{__VA_ARGS__}}.
1697
1698Previous versions of CPP implemented the comma-deletion extension
1699much more generally.  We have restricted it in this release to minimize
1700the differences from C99.  To get the same effect with both this and
1701previous versions of GCC, the token preceding the special @samp{##} must
1702be a comma, and there must be white space between that comma and
1703whatever comes immediately before it:
1704
1705@example
1706#define eprintf(format, args@dots{}) fprintf (stderr, format , ##args)
1707@end example
1708
1709@noindent
1710@xref{Differences from previous versions}, for the gory details.
1711
1712@node Predefined Macros
1713@section Predefined Macros
1714
1715@cindex predefined macros
1716Several object-like macros are predefined; you use them without
1717supplying their definitions.  They fall into three classes: standard,
1718common, and system-specific.
1719
1720In C++, there is a fourth category, the named operators.  They act like
1721predefined macros, but you cannot undefine them.
1722
1723@menu
1724* Standard Predefined Macros::
1725* Common Predefined Macros::
1726* System-specific Predefined Macros::
1727* C++ Named Operators::
1728@end menu
1729
1730@node Standard Predefined Macros
1731@subsection Standard Predefined Macros
1732@cindex standard predefined macros.
1733
1734The standard predefined macros are specified by the C and/or C++
1735language standards, so they are available with all compilers that
1736implement those standards.  Older compilers may not provide all of
1737them.  Their names all start with double underscores.
1738
1739@table @code
1740@item __FILE__
1741This macro expands to the name of the current input file, in the form of
1742a C string constant.  This is the path by which the preprocessor opened
1743the file, not the short name specified in @samp{#include} or as the
1744input file name argument.  For example,
1745@code{"/usr/local/include/myheader.h"} is a possible expansion of this
1746macro.
1747
1748@item __LINE__
1749This macro expands to the current input line number, in the form of a
1750decimal integer constant.  While we call it a predefined macro, it's
1751a pretty strange macro, since its ``definition'' changes with each
1752new line of source code.
1753@end table
1754
1755@code{__FILE__} and @code{__LINE__} are useful in generating an error
1756message to report an inconsistency detected by the program; the message
1757can state the source line at which the inconsistency was detected.  For
1758example,
1759
1760@example
1761fprintf (stderr, "Internal error: "
1762                 "negative string length "
1763                 "%d at %s, line %d.",
1764         length, __FILE__, __LINE__);
1765@end example
1766
1767An @samp{#include} directive changes the expansions of @code{__FILE__}
1768and @code{__LINE__} to correspond to the included file.  At the end of
1769that file, when processing resumes on the input file that contained
1770the @samp{#include} directive, the expansions of @code{__FILE__} and
1771@code{__LINE__} revert to the values they had before the
1772@samp{#include} (but @code{__LINE__} is then incremented by one as
1773processing moves to the line after the @samp{#include}).
1774
1775A @samp{#line} directive changes @code{__LINE__}, and may change
1776@code{__FILE__} as well.  @xref{Line Control}.
1777
1778C99 introduces @code{__func__}, and GCC has provided @code{__FUNCTION__}
1779for a long time.  Both of these are strings containing the name of the
1780current function (there are slight semantic differences; see the GCC
1781manual).  Neither of them is a macro; the preprocessor does not know the
1782name of the current function.  They tend to be useful in conjunction
1783with @code{__FILE__} and @code{__LINE__}, though.
1784
1785@table @code
1786
1787@item __DATE__
1788This macro expands to a string constant that describes the date on which
1789the preprocessor is being run.  The string constant contains eleven
1790characters and looks like @code{@w{"Feb 12 1996"}}.  If the day of the
1791month is less than 10, it is padded with a space on the left.
1792
1793If GCC cannot determine the current date, it will emit a warning message
1794(once per compilation) and @code{__DATE__} will expand to
1795@code{@w{"??? ?? ????"}}.
1796
1797@item __TIME__
1798This macro expands to a string constant that describes the time at
1799which the preprocessor is being run.  The string constant contains
1800eight characters and looks like @code{"23:59:01"}.
1801
1802If GCC cannot determine the current time, it will emit a warning message
1803(once per compilation) and @code{__TIME__} will expand to
1804@code{"??:??:??"}.
1805
1806@item __STDC__
1807In normal operation, this macro expands to the constant 1, to signify
1808that this compiler conforms to ISO Standard C@.  If GNU CPP is used with
1809a compiler other than GCC, this is not necessarily true; however, the
1810preprocessor always conforms to the standard unless the
1811@option{-traditional-cpp} option is used.
1812
1813This macro is not defined if the @option{-traditional-cpp} option is used.
1814
1815On some hosts, the system compiler uses a different convention, where
1816@code{__STDC__} is normally 0, but is 1 if the user specifies strict
1817conformance to the C Standard.  CPP follows the host convention when
1818processing system header files, but when processing user files
1819@code{__STDC__} is always 1.  This has been reported to cause problems;
1820for instance, some versions of Solaris provide X Windows headers that
1821expect @code{__STDC__} to be either undefined or 1.  @xref{Invocation}.
1822
1823@item __STDC_VERSION__
1824This macro expands to the C Standard's version number, a long integer
1825constant of the form @code{@var{yyyy}@var{mm}L} where @var{yyyy} and
1826@var{mm} are the year and month of the Standard version.  This signifies
1827which version of the C Standard the compiler conforms to.  Like
1828@code{__STDC__}, this is not necessarily accurate for the entire
1829implementation, unless GNU CPP is being used with GCC@.
1830
1831The value @code{199409L} signifies the 1989 C standard as amended in
18321994, which is the current default; the value @code{199901L} signifies
1833the 1999 revision of the C standard.  Support for the 1999 revision is
1834not yet complete.
1835
1836This macro is not defined if the @option{-traditional-cpp} option is
1837used, nor when compiling C++ or Objective-C@.
1838
1839@item __STDC_HOSTED__
1840This macro is defined, with value 1, if the compiler's target is a
1841@dfn{hosted environment}.  A hosted environment has the complete
1842facilities of the standard C library available.
1843
1844@item __cplusplus
1845This macro is defined when the C++ compiler is in use.  You can use
1846@code{__cplusplus} to test whether a header is compiled by a C compiler
1847or a C++ compiler.  This macro is similar to @code{__STDC_VERSION__}, in
1848that it expands to a version number.  A fully conforming implementation
1849of the 1998 C++ standard will define this macro to @code{199711L}.  The
1850GNU C++ compiler is not yet fully conforming, so it uses @code{1}
1851instead.  We hope to complete our implementation in the near future.
1852
1853@end table
1854
1855@node Common Predefined Macros
1856@subsection Common Predefined Macros
1857@cindex common predefined macros
1858
1859The common predefined macros are GNU C extensions.  They are available
1860with the same meanings regardless of the machine or operating system on
1861which you are using GNU C@.  Their names all start with double
1862underscores.
1863
1864@table @code
1865
1866@item __GNUC__
1867@itemx __GNUC_MINOR__
1868@itemx __GNUC_PATCHLEVEL__
1869These macros are defined by all GNU compilers that use the C
1870preprocessor: C, C++, and Objective-C@.  Their values are the major
1871version, minor version, and patch level of the compiler, as integer
1872constants.  For example, GCC 3.2.1 will define @code{__GNUC__} to 3,
1873@code{__GNUC_MINOR__} to 2, and @code{__GNUC_PATCHLEVEL__} to 1.  They
1874are defined only when the entire compiler is in use; if you invoke the
1875preprocessor directly, they are not defined.
1876
1877@code{__GNUC_PATCHLEVEL__} is new to GCC 3.0; it is also present in the
1878widely-used development snapshots leading up to 3.0 (which identify
1879themselves as GCC 2.96 or 2.97, depending on which snapshot you have).
1880
1881If all you need to know is whether or not your program is being compiled
1882by GCC, you can simply test @code{__GNUC__}.  If you need to write code
1883which depends on a specific version, you must be more careful.  Each
1884time the minor version is increased, the patch level is reset to zero;
1885each time the major version is increased (which happens rarely), the
1886minor version and patch level are reset.  If you wish to use the
1887predefined macros directly in the conditional, you will need to write it
1888like this:
1889
1890@example
1891/* @r{Test for GCC > 3.2.0} */
1892#if __GNUC__ > 3 || \
1893    (__GNUC__ == 3 && (__GNUC_MINOR__ > 2 || \
1894                       (__GNUC_MINOR__ == 2 && \
1895                        __GNUC_PATCHLEVEL__ > 0))
1896@end example
1897
1898@noindent
1899Another approach is to use the predefined macros to
1900calculate a single number, then compare that against a threshold:
1901
1902@example
1903#define GCC_VERSION (__GNUC__ * 10000 \
1904                     + __GNUC_MINOR__ * 100 \
1905                     + __GNUC_PATCHLEVEL__)
1906@dots{}
1907/* @r{Test for GCC > 3.2.0} */
1908#if GCC_VERSION > 30200
1909@end example
1910
1911@noindent
1912Many people find this form easier to understand.
1913
1914@item __OBJC__
1915This macro is defined, with value 1, when the Objective-C compiler is in
1916use.  You can use @code{__OBJC__} to test whether a header is compiled
1917by a C compiler or a Objective-C compiler.
1918
1919@item __GNUG__
1920The GNU C++ compiler defines this.  Testing it is equivalent to
1921testing @code{@w{(__GNUC__ && __cplusplus)}}.
1922
1923@item __STRICT_ANSI__
1924GCC defines this macro if and only if the @option{-ansi} switch, or a
1925@option{-std} switch specifying strict conformance to some version of ISO C,
1926was specified when GCC was invoked.  It is defined to @samp{1}.
1927This macro exists primarily to direct GNU libc's header files to
1928restrict their definitions to the minimal set found in the 1989 C
1929standard.
1930
1931@item __BASE_FILE__
1932This macro expands to the name of the main input file, in the form
1933of a C string constant.  This is the source file that was specified
1934on the command line of the preprocessor or C compiler.
1935
1936@item __INCLUDE_LEVEL__
1937This macro expands to a decimal integer constant that represents the
1938depth of nesting in include files.  The value of this macro is
1939incremented on every @samp{#include} directive and decremented at the
1940end of every included file.  It starts out at 0, it's value within the
1941base file specified on the command line.
1942
1943@item __VERSION__
1944This macro expands to a string constant which describes the version of
1945the compiler in use.  You should not rely on its contents having any
1946particular form, but it can be counted on to contain at least the
1947release number.
1948
1949@item __OPTIMIZE__
1950@itemx __OPTIMIZE_SIZE__
1951@itemx __NO_INLINE__
1952These macros describe the compilation mode.  @code{__OPTIMIZE__} is
1953defined in all optimizing compilations.  @code{__OPTIMIZE_SIZE__} is
1954defined if the compiler is optimizing for size, not speed.
1955@code{__NO_INLINE__} is defined if no functions will be inlined into
1956their callers (when not optimizing, or when inlining has been
1957specifically disabled by @option{-fno-inline}).
1958
1959These macros cause certain GNU header files to provide optimized
1960definitions, using macros or inline functions, of system library
1961functions.  You should not use these macros in any way unless you make
1962sure that programs will execute with the same effect whether or not they
1963are defined.  If they are defined, their value is 1.
1964
1965@item __CHAR_UNSIGNED__
1966GCC defines this macro if and only if the data type @code{char} is
1967unsigned on the target machine.  It exists to cause the standard header
1968file @file{limits.h} to work correctly.  You should not use this macro
1969yourself; instead, refer to the standard macros defined in @file{limits.h}.
1970
1971@item __WCHAR_UNSIGNED__
1972Like @code{__CHAR_UNSIGNED__}, this macro is defined if and only if the
1973data type @code{wchar_t} is unsigned and the front-end is in C++ mode.
1974
1975@item __REGISTER_PREFIX__
1976This macro expands to a single token (not a string constant) which is
1977the prefix applied to CPU register names in assembly language for this
1978target.  You can use it to write assembly that is usable in multiple
1979environments.  For example, in the @code{m68k-aout} environment it
1980expands to nothing, but in the @code{m68k-coff} environment it expands
1981to a single @samp{%}.
1982
1983@item __USER_LABEL_PREFIX__
1984This macro expands to a single token which is the prefix applied to
1985user labels (symbols visible to C code) in assembly.  For example, in
1986the @code{m68k-aout} environment it expands to an @samp{_}, but in the
1987@code{m68k-coff} environment it expands to nothing.
1988
1989This macro will have the correct definition even if
1990@option{-f(no-)underscores} is in use, but it will not be correct if
1991target-specific options that adjust this prefix are used (e.g.@: the
1992OSF/rose @option{-mno-underscores} option).
1993
1994@item __SIZE_TYPE__
1995@itemx __PTRDIFF_TYPE__
1996@itemx __WCHAR_TYPE__
1997@itemx __WINT_TYPE__
1998These macros are defined to the correct underlying types for the
1999@code{size_t}, @code{ptrdiff_t}, @code{wchar_t}, and @code{wint_t}
2000typedefs, respectively.  They exist to make the standard header files
2001@file{stddef.h} and @file{wchar.h} work correctly.  You should not use
2002these macros directly; instead, include the appropriate headers and use
2003the typedefs.
2004
2005@item __CHAR_BIT__
2006Defined to the number of bits used in the representation of the
2007@code{char} data type.  It exists to make the standard header given
2008numerical limits work correctly.  You should not use
2009this macro directly; instead, include the appropriate headers.
2010
2011@item __SCHAR_MAX__
2012@itemx __WCHAR_MAX__
2013@itemx __SHRT_MAX__
2014@itemx __INT_MAX__
2015@itemx __LONG_MAX__
2016@itemx __LONG_LONG_MAX__
2017Defined to the maximum value of the @code{signed char}, @code{wchar_t}, 
2018@code{signed short},
2019@code{signed int}, @code{signed long}, and @code{signed long long} types
2020respectively.  They exist to make the standard header given numerical limits
2021work correctly.  You should not use these macros directly; instead, include
2022the appropriate headers.
2023
2024@item __USING_SJLJ_EXCEPTIONS__
2025This macro is defined, with value 1, if the compiler uses the old
2026mechanism based on @code{setjmp} and @code{longjmp} for exception
2027handling.
2028
2029@item __NEXT_RUNTIME__
2030This macro is defined, with value 1, if (and only if) the NeXT runtime
2031(as in @option{-fnext-runtime}) is in use for Objective-C.  If the GNU
2032runtime is used, this macro is not defined, so that you can use this
2033macro to determine which runtime (NeXT or GNU) is being used.
2034@end table
2035
2036@node System-specific Predefined Macros
2037@subsection System-specific Predefined Macros
2038
2039@cindex system-specific predefined macros
2040@cindex predefined macros, system-specific
2041@cindex reserved namespace
2042
2043The C preprocessor normally predefines several macros that indicate what
2044type of system and machine is in use.  They are obviously different on
2045each target supported by GCC@.  This manual, being for all systems and
2046machines, cannot tell you what their names are, but you can use
2047@command{cpp -dM} to see them all.  @xref{Invocation}.  All system-specific
2048predefined macros expand to the constant 1, so you can test them with
2049either @samp{#ifdef} or @samp{#if}.
2050
2051The C standard requires that all system-specific macros be part of the
2052@dfn{reserved namespace}.  All names which begin with two underscores,
2053or an underscore and a capital letter, are reserved for the compiler and
2054library to use as they wish.  However, historically system-specific
2055macros have had names with no special prefix; for instance, it is common
2056to find @code{unix} defined on Unix systems.  For all such macros, GCC
2057provides a parallel macro with two underscores added at the beginning
2058and the end.  If @code{unix} is defined, @code{__unix__} will be defined
2059too.  There will never be more than two underscores; the parallel of
2060@code{_mips} is @code{__mips__}.
2061
2062When the @option{-ansi} option, or any @option{-std} option that
2063requests strict conformance, is given to the compiler, all the
2064system-specific predefined macros outside the reserved namespace are
2065suppressed.  The parallel macros, inside the reserved namespace, remain
2066defined.
2067
2068We are slowly phasing out all predefined macros which are outside the
2069reserved namespace.  You should never use them in new programs, and we
2070encourage you to correct older code to use the parallel macros whenever
2071you find it.  We don't recommend you use the system-specific macros that
2072are in the reserved namespace, either.  It is better in the long run to
2073check specifically for features you need, using a tool such as
2074@command{autoconf}.
2075
2076@node C++ Named Operators
2077@subsection C++ Named Operators
2078@cindex named operators
2079@cindex C++ named operators
2080@cindex iso646.h
2081
2082In C++, there are eleven keywords which are simply alternate spellings
2083of operators normally written with punctuation.  These keywords are
2084treated as such even in the preprocessor.  They function as operators in
2085@samp{#if}, and they cannot be defined as macros or poisoned.  In C, you
2086can request that those keywords take their C++ meaning by including
2087@file{iso646.h}.  That header defines each one as a normal object-like
2088macro expanding to the appropriate punctuator.
2089
2090These are the named operators and their corresponding punctuators:
2091
2092@multitable {Named Operator} {Punctuator}
2093@item Named Operator @tab Punctuator
2094@item @code{and}    @tab @code{&&}
2095@item @code{and_eq} @tab @code{&=}
2096@item @code{bitand} @tab @code{&}
2097@item @code{bitor}  @tab @code{|}
2098@item @code{compl}  @tab @code{~}
2099@item @code{not}    @tab @code{!}
2100@item @code{not_eq} @tab @code{!=}
2101@item @code{or}     @tab @code{||}
2102@item @code{or_eq}  @tab @code{|=}
2103@item @code{xor}    @tab @code{^}
2104@item @code{xor_eq} @tab @code{^=}
2105@end multitable
2106
2107@node Undefining and Redefining Macros
2108@section Undefining and Redefining Macros
2109@cindex undefining macros
2110@cindex redefining macros
2111@findex #undef
2112
2113If a macro ceases to be useful, it may be @dfn{undefined} with the
2114@samp{#undef} directive.  @samp{#undef} takes a single argument, the
2115name of the macro to undefine.  You use the bare macro name, even if the
2116macro is function-like.  It is an error if anything appears on the line
2117after the macro name.  @samp{#undef} has no effect if the name is not a
2118macro.
2119
2120@example
2121#define FOO 4
2122x = FOO;        @expansion{} x = 4;
2123#undef FOO
2124x = FOO;        @expansion{} x = FOO;
2125@end example
2126
2127Once a macro has been undefined, that identifier may be @dfn{redefined}
2128as a macro by a subsequent @samp{#define} directive.  The new definition
2129need not have any resemblance to the old definition.
2130
2131However, if an identifier which is currently a macro is redefined, then
2132the new definition must be @dfn{effectively the same} as the old one.
2133Two macro definitions are effectively the same if:
2134@itemize @bullet
2135@item Both are the same type of macro (object- or function-like).
2136@item All the tokens of the replacement list are the same.
2137@item If there are any parameters, they are the same.
2138@item Whitespace appears in the same places in both.  It need not be
2139exactly the same amount of whitespace, though.  Remember that comments
2140count as whitespace.
2141@end itemize
2142
2143@noindent
2144These definitions are effectively the same:
2145@example
2146#define FOUR (2 + 2)
2147#define FOUR         (2    +    2)
2148#define FOUR (2 /* two */ + 2)
2149@end example
2150@noindent
2151but these are not:
2152@example
2153#define FOUR (2 + 2)
2154#define FOUR ( 2+2 )
2155#define FOUR (2 * 2)
2156#define FOUR(score,and,seven,years,ago) (2 + 2)
2157@end example
2158
2159If a macro is redefined with a definition that is not effectively the
2160same as the old one, the preprocessor issues a warning and changes the
2161macro to use the new definition.  If the new definition is effectively
2162the same, the redefinition is silently ignored.  This allows, for
2163instance, two different headers to define a common macro.  The
2164preprocessor will only complain if the definitions do not match.
2165
2166@node Directives Within Macro Arguments
2167@section Directives Within Macro Arguments
2168@cindex macro arguments and directives
2169
2170Occasionally it is convenient to use preprocessor directives within
2171the arguments of a macro.  The C and C++ standards declare that
2172behavior in these cases is undefined.
2173
2174Versions of CPP prior to 3.2 would reject such constructs with an
2175error message.  This was the only syntactic difference between normal
2176functions and function-like macros, so it seemed attractive to remove
2177this limitation, and people would often be surprised that they could
2178not use macros in this way.  Moreover, sometimes people would use
2179conditional compilation in the argument list to a normal library
2180function like @samp{printf}, only to find that after a library upgrade
2181@samp{printf} had changed to be a function-like macro, and their code
2182would no longer compile.  So from version 3.2 we changed CPP to
2183successfully process arbitrary directives within macro arguments in
2184exactly the same way as it would have processed the directive were the
2185function-like macro invocation not present.
2186
2187If, within a macro invocation, that macro is redefined, then the new
2188definition takes effect in time for argument pre-expansion, but the
2189original definition is still used for argument replacement.  Here is a
2190pathological example:
2191
2192@smallexample
2193#define f(x) x x
2194f (1
2195#undef f
2196#define f 2
2197f)
2198@end smallexample
2199
2200@noindent
2201which expands to
2202
2203@smallexample
22041 2 1 2
2205@end smallexample
2206
2207@noindent
2208with the semantics described above.
2209
2210@node Macro Pitfalls
2211@section Macro Pitfalls
2212@cindex problems with macros
2213@cindex pitfalls of macros
2214
2215In this section we describe some special rules that apply to macros and
2216macro expansion, and point out certain cases in which the rules have
2217counter-intuitive consequences that you must watch out for.
2218
2219@menu
2220* Misnesting::
2221* Operator Precedence Problems::
2222* Swallowing the Semicolon::
2223* Duplication of Side Effects::
2224* Self-Referential Macros::
2225* Argument Prescan::
2226* Newlines in Arguments::
2227@end menu
2228
2229@node Misnesting
2230@subsection Misnesting
2231
2232When a macro is called with arguments, the arguments are substituted
2233into the macro body and the result is checked, together with the rest of
2234the input file, for more macro calls.  It is possible to piece together
2235a macro call coming partially from the macro body and partially from the
2236arguments.  For example,
2237
2238@example
2239#define twice(x) (2*(x))
2240#define call_with_1(x) x(1)
2241call_with_1 (twice)
2242     @expansion{} twice(1)
2243     @expansion{} (2*(1))
2244@end example
2245
2246Macro definitions do not have to have balanced parentheses.  By writing
2247an unbalanced open parenthesis in a macro body, it is possible to create
2248a macro call that begins inside the macro body but ends outside of it.
2249For example,
2250
2251@example
2252#define strange(file) fprintf (file, "%s %d",
2253@dots{}
2254strange(stderr) p, 35)
2255     @expansion{} fprintf (stderr, "%s %d", p, 35)
2256@end example
2257
2258The ability to piece together a macro call can be useful, but the use of
2259unbalanced open parentheses in a macro body is just confusing, and
2260should be avoided.
2261
2262@node Operator Precedence Problems
2263@subsection Operator Precedence Problems
2264@cindex parentheses in macro bodies
2265
2266You may have noticed that in most of the macro definition examples shown
2267above, each occurrence of a macro argument name had parentheses around
2268it.  In addition, another pair of parentheses usually surround the
2269entire macro definition.  Here is why it is best to write macros that
2270way.
2271
2272Suppose you define a macro as follows,
2273
2274@example
2275#define ceil_div(x, y) (x + y - 1) / y
2276@end example
2277
2278@noindent
2279whose purpose is to divide, rounding up.  (One use for this operation is
2280to compute how many @code{int} objects are needed to hold a certain
2281number of @code{char} objects.)  Then suppose it is used as follows:
2282
2283@example
2284a = ceil_div (b & c, sizeof (int));
2285     @expansion{} a = (b & c + sizeof (int) - 1) / sizeof (int);
2286@end example
2287
2288@noindent
2289This does not do what is intended.  The operator-precedence rules of
2290C make it equivalent to this:
2291
2292@example
2293a = (b & (c + sizeof (int) - 1)) / sizeof (int);
2294@end example
2295
2296@noindent
2297What we want is this:
2298
2299@example
2300a = ((b & c) + sizeof (int) - 1)) / sizeof (int);
2301@end example
2302
2303@noindent
2304Defining the macro as
2305
2306@example
2307#define ceil_div(x, y) ((x) + (y) - 1) / (y)
2308@end example
2309
2310@noindent
2311provides the desired result.
2312
2313Unintended grouping can result in another way.  Consider @code{sizeof
2314ceil_div(1, 2)}.  That has the appearance of a C expression that would
2315compute the size of the type of @code{ceil_div (1, 2)}, but in fact it
2316means something very different.  Here is what it expands to:
2317
2318@example
2319sizeof ((1) + (2) - 1) / (2)
2320@end example
2321
2322@noindent
2323This would take the size of an integer and divide it by two.  The
2324precedence rules have put the division outside the @code{sizeof} when it
2325was intended to be inside.
2326
2327Parentheses around the entire macro definition prevent such problems.
2328Here, then, is the recommended way to define @code{ceil_div}:
2329
2330@example
2331#define ceil_div(x, y) (((x) + (y) - 1) / (y))
2332@end example
2333
2334@node Swallowing the Semicolon
2335@subsection Swallowing the Semicolon
2336@cindex semicolons (after macro calls)
2337
2338Often it is desirable to define a macro that expands into a compound
2339statement.  Consider, for example, the following macro, that advances a
2340pointer (the argument @code{p} says where to find it) across whitespace
2341characters:
2342
2343@example
2344#define SKIP_SPACES(p, limit)  \
2345@{ char *lim = (limit);         \
2346  while (p < lim) @{            \
2347    if (*p++ != ' ') @{         \
2348      p--; break; @}@}@}
2349@end example
2350
2351@noindent
2352Here backslash-newline is used to split the macro definition, which must
2353be a single logical line, so that it resembles the way such code would
2354be laid out if not part of a macro definition.
2355
2356A call to this macro might be @code{SKIP_SPACES (p, lim)}.  Strictly
2357speaking, the call expands to a compound statement, which is a complete
2358statement with no need for a semicolon to end it.  However, since it
2359looks like a function call, it minimizes confusion if you can use it
2360like a function call, writing a semicolon afterward, as in
2361@code{SKIP_SPACES (p, lim);}
2362
2363This can cause trouble before @code{else} statements, because the
2364semicolon is actually a null statement.  Suppose you write
2365
2366@example
2367if (*p != 0)
2368  SKIP_SPACES (p, lim);
2369else @dots{}
2370@end example
2371
2372@noindent
2373The presence of two statements---the compound statement and a null
2374statement---in between the @code{if} condition and the @code{else}
2375makes invalid C code.
2376
2377The definition of the macro @code{SKIP_SPACES} can be altered to solve
2378this problem, using a @code{do @dots{} while} statement.  Here is how:
2379
2380@example
2381#define SKIP_SPACES(p, limit)     \
2382do @{ char *lim = (limit);         \
2383     while (p < lim) @{            \
2384       if (*p++ != ' ') @{         \
2385         p--; break; @}@}@}          \
2386while (0)
2387@end example
2388
2389Now @code{SKIP_SPACES (p, lim);} expands into
2390
2391@example
2392do @{@dots{}@} while (0);
2393@end example
2394
2395@noindent
2396which is one statement.  The loop executes exactly once; most compilers
2397generate no extra code for it.
2398
2399@node Duplication of Side Effects
2400@subsection Duplication of Side Effects
2401
2402@cindex side effects (in macro arguments)
2403@cindex unsafe macros
2404Many C programs define a macro @code{min}, for ``minimum'', like this:
2405
2406@example
2407#define min(X, Y)  ((X) < (Y) ? (X) : (Y))
2408@end example
2409
2410When you use this macro with an argument containing a side effect,
2411as shown here,
2412
2413@example
2414next = min (x + y, foo (z));
2415@end example
2416
2417@noindent
2418it expands as follows:
2419
2420@example
2421next = ((x + y) < (foo (z)) ? (x + y) : (foo (z)));
2422@end example
2423
2424@noindent
2425where @code{x + y} has been substituted for @code{X} and @code{foo (z)}
2426for @code{Y}.
2427
2428The function @code{foo} is used only once in the statement as it appears
2429in the program, but the expression @code{foo (z)} has been substituted
2430twice into the macro expansion.  As a result, @code{foo} might be called
2431two times when the statement is executed.  If it has side effects or if
2432it takes a long time to compute, the results might not be what you
2433intended.  We say that @code{min} is an @dfn{unsafe} macro.
2434
2435The best solution to this problem is to define @code{min} in a way that
2436computes the value of @code{foo (z)} only once.  The C language offers
2437no standard way to do this, but it can be done with GNU extensions as
2438follows:
2439
2440@example
2441#define min(X, Y)                \
2442(@{ typeof (X) x_ = (X);          \
2443   typeof (Y) y_ = (Y);          \
2444   (x_ < y_) ? x_ : y_; @})
2445@end example
2446
2447The @samp{(@{ @dots{} @})} notation produces a compound statement that
2448acts as an expression.  Its value is the value of its last statement.
2449This permits us to define local variables and assign each argument to
2450one.  The local variables have underscores after their names to reduce
2451the risk of conflict with an identifier of wider scope (it is impossible
2452to avoid this entirely).  Now each argument is evaluated exactly once.
2453
2454If you do not wish to use GNU C extensions, the only solution is to be
2455careful when @emph{using} the macro @code{min}.  For example, you can
2456calculate the value of @code{foo (z)}, save it in a variable, and use
2457that variable in @code{min}:
2458
2459@example
2460@group
2461#define min(X, Y)  ((X) < (Y) ? (X) : (Y))
2462@dots{}
2463@{
2464  int tem = foo (z);
2465  next = min (x + y, tem);
2466@}
2467@end group
2468@end example
2469
2470@noindent
2471(where we assume that @code{foo} returns type @code{int}).
2472
2473@node Self-Referential Macros
2474@subsection Self-Referential Macros
2475@cindex self-reference
2476
2477A @dfn{self-referential} macro is one whose name appears in its
2478definition.  Recall that all macro definitions are rescanned for more
2479macros to replace.  If the self-reference were considered a use of the
2480macro, it would produce an infinitely large expansion.  To prevent this,
2481the self-reference is not considered a macro call.  It is passed into
2482the preprocessor output unchanged.  Let's consider an example:
2483
2484@example
2485#define foo (4 + foo)
2486@end example
2487
2488@noindent
2489where @code{foo} is also a variable in your program.
2490
2491Following the ordinary rules, each reference to @code{foo} will expand
2492into @code{(4 + foo)}; then this will be rescanned and will expand into
2493@code{(4 + (4 + foo))}; and so on until the computer runs out of memory.
2494
2495The self-reference rule cuts this process short after one step, at
2496@code{(4 + foo)}.  Therefore, this macro definition has the possibly
2497useful effect of causing the program to add 4 to the value of @code{foo}
2498wherever @code{foo} is referred to.
2499
2500In most cases, it is a bad idea to take advantage of this feature.  A
2501person reading the program who sees that @code{foo} is a variable will
2502not expect that it is a macro as well.  The reader will come across the
2503identifier @code{foo} in the program and think its value should be that
2504of the variable @code{foo}, whereas in fact the value is four greater.
2505
2506One common, useful use of self-reference is to create a macro which
2507expands to itself.  If you write
2508
2509@example
2510#define EPERM EPERM
2511@end example
2512
2513@noindent
2514then the macro @code{EPERM} expands to @code{EPERM}.  Effectively, it is
2515left alone by the preprocessor whenever it's used in running text.  You
2516can tell that it's a macro with @samp{#ifdef}.  You might do this if you
2517want to define numeric constants with an @code{enum}, but have
2518@samp{#ifdef} be true for each constant.
2519
2520If a macro @code{x} expands to use a macro @code{y}, and the expansion of
2521@code{y} refers to the macro @code{x}, that is an @dfn{indirect
2522self-reference} of @code{x}.  @code{x} is not expanded in this case
2523either.  Thus, if we have
2524
2525@example
2526#define x (4 + y)
2527#define y (2 * x)
2528@end example
2529
2530@noindent
2531then @code{x} and @code{y} expand as follows:
2532
2533@example
2534@group
2535x    @expansion{} (4 + y)
2536     @expansion{} (4 + (2 * x))
2537
2538y    @expansion{} (2 * x)
2539     @expansion{} (2 * (4 + y))
2540@end group
2541@end example
2542
2543@noindent
2544Each macro is expanded when it appears in the definition of the other
2545macro, but not when it indirectly appears in its own definition.
2546
2547@node Argument Prescan
2548@subsection Argument Prescan
2549@cindex expansion of arguments
2550@cindex macro argument expansion
2551@cindex prescan of macro arguments
2552
2553Macro arguments are completely macro-expanded before they are
2554substituted into a macro body, unless they are stringified or pasted
2555with other tokens.  After substitution, the entire macro body, including
2556the substituted arguments, is scanned again for macros to be expanded.
2557The result is that the arguments are scanned @emph{twice} to expand
2558macro calls in them.
2559
2560Most of the time, this has no effect.  If the argument contained any
2561macro calls, they are expanded during the first scan.  The result
2562therefore contains no macro calls, so the second scan does not change
2563it.  If the argument were substituted as given, with no prescan, the
2564single remaining scan would find the same macro calls and produce the
2565same results.
2566
2567You might expect the double scan to change the results when a
2568self-referential macro is used in an argument of another macro
2569(@pxref{Self-Referential Macros}): the self-referential macro would be
2570expanded once in the first scan, and a second time in the second scan.
2571However, this is not what happens.  The self-references that do not
2572expand in the first scan are marked so that they will not expand in the
2573second scan either.
2574
2575You might wonder, ``Why mention the prescan, if it makes no difference?
2576And why not skip it and make the preprocessor faster?''  The answer is
2577that the prescan does make a difference in three special cases:
2578
2579@itemize @bullet
2580@item
2581Nested calls to a macro.
2582
2583We say that @dfn{nested} calls to a macro occur when a macro's argument
2584contains a call to that very macro.  For example, if @code{f} is a macro
2585that expects one argument, @code{f (f (1))} is a nested pair of calls to
2586@code{f}.  The desired expansion is made by expanding @code{f (1)} and
2587substituting that into the definition of @code{f}.  The prescan causes
2588the expected result to happen.  Without the prescan, @code{f (1)} itself
2589would be substituted as an argument, and the inner use of @code{f} would
2590appear during the main scan as an indirect self-reference and would not
2591be expanded.
2592
2593@item
2594Macros that call other macros that stringify or concatenate.
2595
2596If an argument is stringified or concatenated, the prescan does not
2597occur.  If you @emph{want} to expand a macro, then stringify or
2598concatenate its expansion, you can do that by causing one macro to call
2599another macro that does the stringification or concatenation.  For
2600instance, if you have
2601
2602@example
2603#define AFTERX(x) X_ ## x
2604#define XAFTERX(x) AFTERX(x)
2605#define TABLESIZE 1024
2606#define BUFSIZE TABLESIZE
2607@end example
2608
2609then @code{AFTERX(BUFSIZE)} expands to @code{X_BUFSIZE}, and
2610@code{XAFTERX(BUFSIZE)} expands to @code{X_1024}.  (Not to
2611@code{X_TABLESIZE}.  Prescan always does a complete expansion.)
2612
2613@item
2614Macros used in arguments, whose expansions contain unshielded commas.
2615
2616This can cause a macro expanded on the second scan to be called with the
2617wrong number of arguments.  Here is an example:
2618
2619@example
2620#define foo  a,b
2621#define bar(x) lose(x)
2622#define lose(x) (1 + (x))
2623@end example
2624
2625We would like @code{bar(foo)} to turn into @code{(1 + (foo))}, which
2626would then turn into @code{(1 + (a,b))}.  Instead, @code{bar(foo)}
2627expands into @code{lose(a,b)}, and you get an error because @code{lose}
2628requires a single argument.  In this case, the problem is easily solved
2629by the same parentheses that ought to be used to prevent misnesting of
2630arithmetic operations:
2631
2632@example
2633#define foo (a,b)
2634@exdent or
2635#define bar(x) lose((x))
2636@end example
2637
2638The extra pair of parentheses prevents the comma in @code{foo}'s
2639definition from being interpreted as an argument separator.
2640
2641@end itemize
2642
2643@node Newlines in Arguments
2644@subsection Newlines in Arguments
2645@cindex newlines in macro arguments
2646
2647The invocation of a function-like macro can extend over many logical
2648lines.  However, in the present implementation, the entire expansion
2649comes out on one line.  Thus line numbers emitted by the compiler or
2650debugger refer to the line the invocation started on, which might be
2651different to the line containing the argument causing the problem.
2652
2653Here is an example illustrating this:
2654
2655@example
2656#define ignore_second_arg(a,b,c) a; c
2657
2658ignore_second_arg (foo (),
2659                   ignored (),
2660                   syntax error);
2661@end example
2662
2663@noindent
2664The syntax error triggered by the tokens @code{syntax error} results in
2665an error message citing line three---the line of ignore_second_arg---
2666even though the problematic code comes from line five.
2667
2668We consider this a bug, and intend to fix it in the near future.
2669
2670@node Conditionals
2671@chapter Conditionals
2672@cindex conditionals
2673
2674A @dfn{conditional} is a directive that instructs the preprocessor to
2675select whether or not to include a chunk of code in the final token
2676stream passed to the compiler.  Preprocessor conditionals can test
2677arithmetic expressions, or whether a name is defined as a macro, or both
2678simultaneously using the special @code{defined} operator.
2679
2680A conditional in the C preprocessor resembles in some ways an @code{if}
2681statement in C, but it is important to understand the difference between
2682them.  The condition in an @code{if} statement is tested during the
2683execution of your program.  Its purpose is to allow your program to
2684behave differently from run to run, depending on the data it is
2685operating on.  The condition in a preprocessing conditional directive is
2686tested when your program is compiled.  Its purpose is to allow different
2687code to be included in the program depending on the situation at the
2688time of compilation.
2689
2690However, the distinction is becoming less clear.  Modern compilers often
2691do test @code{if} statements when a program is compiled, if their
2692conditions are known not to vary at run time, and eliminate code which
2693can never be executed.  If you can count on your compiler to do this,
2694you may find that your program is more readable if you use @code{if}
2695statements with constant conditions (perhaps determined by macros).  Of
2696course, you can only use this to exclude code, not type definitions or
2697other preprocessing directives, and you can only do it if the code
2698remains syntactically valid when it is not to be used.
2699
2700GCC version 3 eliminates this kind of never-executed code even when
2701not optimizing.  Older versions did it only when optimizing.
2702
2703@menu
2704* Conditional Uses::
2705* Conditional Syntax::
2706* Deleted Code::
2707@end menu
2708
2709@node Conditional Uses
2710@section Conditional Uses
2711
2712There are three general reasons to use a conditional.
2713
2714@itemize @bullet
2715@item
2716A program may need to use different code depending on the machine or
2717operating system it is to run on.  In some cases the code for one
2718operating system may be erroneous on another operating system; for
2719example, it might refer to data types or constants that do not exist on
2720the other system.  When this happens, it is not enough to avoid
2721executing the invalid code.  Its mere presence will cause the compiler
2722to reject the program.  With a preprocessing conditional, the offending
2723code can be effectively excised from the program when it is not valid.
2724
2725@item
2726You may want to be able to compile the same source file into two
2727different programs.  One version might make frequent time-consuming
2728consistency checks on its intermediate data, or print the values of
2729those data for debugging, and the other not.
2730
2731@item
2732A conditional whose condition is always false is one way to exclude code
2733from the program but keep it as a sort of comment for future reference.
2734@end itemize
2735
2736Simple programs that do not need system-specific logic or complex
2737debugging hooks generally will not need to use preprocessing
2738conditionals.
2739
2740@node Conditional Syntax
2741@section Conditional Syntax
2742
2743@findex #if
2744A conditional in the C preprocessor begins with a @dfn{conditional
2745directive}: @samp{#if}, @samp{#ifdef} or @samp{#ifndef}.
2746
2747@menu
2748* Ifdef::
2749* If::
2750* Defined::
2751* Else::
2752* Elif::
2753@end menu
2754
2755@node Ifdef
2756@subsection Ifdef
2757@findex #ifdef
2758@findex #endif
2759
2760The simplest sort of conditional is
2761
2762@example
2763@group
2764#ifdef @var{MACRO}
2765
2766@var{controlled text}
2767
2768#endif /* @var{MACRO} */
2769@end group
2770@end example
2771
2772@cindex conditional group
2773This block is called a @dfn{conditional group}.  @var{controlled text}
2774will be included in the output of the preprocessor if and only if
2775@var{MACRO} is defined.  We say that the conditional @dfn{succeeds} if
2776@var{MACRO} is defined, @dfn{fails} if it is not.
2777
2778The @var{controlled text} inside of a conditional can include
2779preprocessing directives.  They are executed only if the conditional
2780succeeds.  You can nest conditional groups inside other conditional
2781groups, but they must be completely nested.  In other words,
2782@samp{#endif} always matches the nearest @samp{#ifdef} (or
2783@samp{#ifndef}, or @samp{#if}).  Also, you cannot start a conditional
2784group in one file and end it in another.
2785
2786Even if a conditional fails, the @var{controlled text} inside it is
2787still run through initial transformations and tokenization.  Therefore,
2788it must all be lexically valid C@.  Normally the only way this matters is
2789that all comments and string literals inside a failing conditional group
2790must still be properly ended.
2791
2792The comment following the @samp{#endif} is not required, but it is a
2793good practice if there is a lot of @var{controlled text}, because it
2794helps people match the @samp{#endif} to the corresponding @samp{#ifdef}.
2795Older programs sometimes put @var{MACRO} directly after the
2796@samp{#endif} without enclosing it in a comment.  This is invalid code
2797according to the C standard.  CPP accepts it with a warning.  It
2798never affects which @samp{#ifndef} the @samp{#endif} matches.
2799
2800@findex #ifndef
2801Sometimes you wish to use some code if a macro is @emph{not} defined.
2802You can do this by writing @samp{#ifndef} instead of @samp{#ifdef}.
2803One common use of @samp{#ifndef} is to include code only the first
2804time a header file is included.  @xref{Once-Only Headers}.
2805
2806Macro definitions can vary between compilations for several reasons.
2807Here are some samples.
2808
2809@itemize @bullet
2810@item
2811Some macros are predefined on each kind of machine
2812(@pxref{System-specific Predefined Macros}).  This allows you to provide
2813code specially tuned for a particular machine.
2814
2815@item
2816System header files define more macros, associated with the features
2817they implement.  You can test these macros with conditionals to avoid
2818using a system feature on a machine where it is not implemented.
2819
2820@item
2821Macros can be defined or undefined with the @option{-D} and @option{-U}
2822command line options when you compile the program.  You can arrange to
2823compile the same source file into two different programs by choosing a
2824macro name to specify which program you want, writing conditionals to
2825test whether or how this macro is defined, and then controlling the
2826state of the macro with command line options, perhaps set in the
2827Makefile.  @xref{Invocation}.
2828
2829@item
2830Your program might have a special header file (often called
2831@file{config.h}) that is adjusted when the program is compiled.  It can
2832define or not define macros depending on the features of the system and
2833the desired capabilities of the program.  The adjustment can be
2834automated by a tool such as @command{autoconf}, or done by hand.
2835@end itemize
2836
2837@node If
2838@subsection If
2839
2840The @samp{#if} directive allows you to test the value of an arithmetic
2841expression, rather than the mere existence of one macro.  Its syntax is
2842
2843@example
2844@group
2845#if @var{expression}
2846
2847@var{controlled text}
2848
2849#endif /* @var{expression} */
2850@end group
2851@end example
2852
2853@var{expression} is a C expression of integer type, subject to stringent
2854restrictions.  It may contain
2855
2856@itemize @bullet
2857@item
2858Integer constants.
2859
2860@item
2861Character constants, which are interpreted as they would be in normal
2862code.
2863
2864@item
2865Arithmetic operators for addition, subtraction, multiplication,
2866division, bitwise operations, shifts, comparisons, and logical
2867operations (@code{&&} and @code{||}).  The latter two obey the usual
2868short-circuiting rules of standard C@.
2869
2870@item
2871Macros.  All macros in the expression are expanded before actual
2872computation of the expression's value begins.
2873
2874@item
2875Uses of the @code{defined} operator, which lets you check whether macros
2876are defined in the middle of an @samp{#if}.
2877
2878@item
2879Identifiers that are not macros, which are all considered to be the
2880number zero.  This allows you to write @code{@w{#if MACRO}} instead of
2881@code{@w{#ifdef MACRO}}, if you know that MACRO, when defined, will
2882always have a nonzero value.  Function-like macros used without their
2883function call parentheses are also treated as zero.
2884
2885In some contexts this shortcut is undesirable.  The @option{-Wundef}
2886option causes GCC to warn whenever it encounters an identifier which is
2887not a macro in an @samp{#if}.
2888@end itemize
2889
2890The preprocessor does not know anything about types in the language.
2891Therefore, @code{sizeof} operators are not recognized in @samp{#if}, and
2892neither are @code{enum} constants.  They will be taken as identifiers
2893which are not macros, and replaced by zero.  In the case of
2894@code{sizeof}, this is likely to cause the expression to be invalid.
2895
2896The preprocessor calculates the value of @var{expression}.  It carries
2897out all calculations in the widest integer type known to the compiler;
2898on most machines supported by GCC this is 64 bits.  This is not the same
2899rule as the compiler uses to calculate the value of a constant
2900expression, and may give different results in some cases.  If the value
2901comes out to be nonzero, the @samp{#if} succeeds and the @var{controlled
2902text} is included; otherwise it is skipped.
2903
2904If @var{expression} is not correctly formed, GCC issues an error and
2905treats the conditional as having failed.
2906
2907@node Defined
2908@subsection Defined
2909
2910@cindex @code{defined}
2911The special operator @code{defined} is used in @samp{#if} and
2912@samp{#elif} expressions to test whether a certain name is defined as a
2913macro.  @code{defined @var{name}} and @code{defined (@var{name})} are
2914both expressions whose value is 1 if @var{name} is defined as a macro at
2915the current point in the program, and 0 otherwise.  Thus,  @code{@w{#if
2916defined MACRO}} is precisely equivalent to @code{@w{#ifdef MACRO}}.
2917
2918@code{defined} is useful when you wish to test more than one macro for
2919existence at once.  For example,
2920
2921@example
2922#if defined (__vax__) || defined (__ns16000__)
2923@end example
2924
2925@noindent
2926would succeed if either of the names @code{__vax__} or
2927@code{__ns16000__} is defined as a macro.
2928
2929Conditionals written like this:
2930
2931@example
2932#if defined BUFSIZE && BUFSIZE >= 1024
2933@end example
2934
2935@noindent
2936can generally be simplified to just @code{@w{#if BUFSIZE >= 1024}},
2937since if @code{BUFSIZE} is not defined, it will be interpreted as having
2938the value zero.
2939
2940If the @code{defined} operator appears as a result of a macro expansion,
2941the C standard says the behavior is undefined.  GNU cpp treats it as a
2942genuine @code{defined} operator and evaluates it normally.  It will warn
2943wherever your code uses this feature if you use the command-line option
2944@option{-pedantic}, since other compilers may handle it differently.
2945
2946@node Else
2947@subsection Else
2948
2949@findex #else
2950The @samp{#else} directive can be added to a conditional to provide
2951alternative text to be used if the condition fails.  This is what it
2952looks like:
2953
2954@example
2955@group
2956#if @var{expression}
2957@var{text-if-true}
2958#else /* Not @var{expression} */
2959@var{text-if-false}
2960#endif /* Not @var{expression} */
2961@end group
2962@end example
2963
2964@noindent
2965If @var{expression} is nonzero, the @var{text-if-true} is included and
2966the @var{text-if-false} is skipped.  If @var{expression} is zero, the
2967opposite happens.
2968
2969You can use @samp{#else} with @samp{#ifdef} and @samp{#ifndef}, too.
2970
2971@node Elif
2972@subsection Elif
2973
2974@findex #elif
2975One common case of nested conditionals is used to check for more than two
2976possible alternatives.  For example, you might have
2977
2978@example
2979#if X == 1
2980@dots{}
2981#else /* X != 1 */
2982#if X == 2
2983@dots{}
2984#else /* X != 2 */
2985@dots{}
2986#endif /* X != 2 */
2987#endif /* X != 1 */
2988@end example
2989
2990Another conditional directive, @samp{#elif}, allows this to be
2991abbreviated as follows:
2992
2993@example
2994#if X == 1
2995@dots{}
2996#elif X == 2
2997@dots{}
2998#else /* X != 2 and X != 1*/
2999@dots{}
3000#endif /* X != 2 and X != 1*/
3001@end example
3002
3003@samp{#elif} stands for ``else if''.  Like @samp{#else}, it goes in the
3004middle of a conditional group and subdivides it; it does not require a
3005matching @samp{#endif} of its own.  Like @samp{#if}, the @samp{#elif}
3006directive includes an expression to be tested.  The text following the
3007@samp{#elif} is processed only if the original @samp{#if}-condition
3008failed and the @samp{#elif} condition succeeds.
3009
3010More than one @samp{#elif} can go in the same conditional group.  Then
3011the text after each @samp{#elif} is processed only if the @samp{#elif}
3012condition succeeds after the original @samp{#if} and all previous
3013@samp{#elif} directives within it have failed.
3014
3015@samp{#else} is allowed after any number of @samp{#elif} directives, but
3016@samp{#elif} may not follow @samp{#else}.
3017
3018@node Deleted Code
3019@section Deleted Code
3020@cindex commenting out code
3021
3022If you replace or delete a part of the program but want to keep the old
3023code around for future reference, you often cannot simply comment it
3024out.  Block comments do not nest, so the first comment inside the old
3025code will end the commenting-out.  The probable result is a flood of
3026syntax errors.
3027
3028One way to avoid this problem is to use an always-false conditional
3029instead.  For instance, put @code{#if 0} before the deleted code and
3030@code{#endif} after it.  This works even if the code being turned
3031off contains conditionals, but they must be entire conditionals
3032(balanced @samp{#if} and @samp{#endif}).
3033
3034Some people use @code{#ifdef notdef} instead.  This is risky, because
3035@code{notdef} might be accidentally defined as a macro, and then the
3036conditional would succeed.  @code{#if 0} can be counted on to fail.
3037
3038Do not use @code{#if 0} for comments which are not C code.  Use a real
3039comment, instead.  The interior of @code{#if 0} must consist of complete
3040tokens; in particular, single-quote characters must balance.  Comments
3041often contain unbalanced single-quote characters (known in English as
3042apostrophes).  These confuse @code{#if 0}.  They don't confuse
3043@samp{/*}.
3044
3045@node Diagnostics
3046@chapter Diagnostics
3047@cindex diagnostic
3048@cindex reporting errors
3049@cindex reporting warnings
3050
3051@findex #error
3052The directive @samp{#error} causes the preprocessor to report a fatal
3053error.  The tokens forming the rest of the line following @samp{#error}
3054are used as the error message.
3055
3056You would use @samp{#error} inside of a conditional that detects a
3057combination of parameters which you know the program does not properly
3058support.  For example, if you know that the program will not run
3059properly on a VAX, you might write
3060
3061@example
3062@group
3063#ifdef __vax__
3064#error "Won't work on VAXen.  See comments at get_last_object."
3065#endif
3066@end group
3067@end example
3068
3069If you have several configuration parameters that must be set up by
3070the installation in a consistent way, you can use conditionals to detect
3071an inconsistency and report it with @samp{#error}.  For example,
3072
3073@example
3074#if !defined(UNALIGNED_INT_ASM_OP) && defined(DWARF2_DEBUGGING_INFO)
3075#error "DWARF2_DEBUGGING_INFO requires UNALIGNED_INT_ASM_OP."
3076#endif
3077@end example
3078
3079@findex #warning
3080The directive @samp{#warning} is like @samp{#error}, but causes the
3081preprocessor to issue a warning and continue preprocessing.  The tokens
3082following @samp{#warning} are used as the warning message.
3083
3084You might use @samp{#warning} in obsolete header files, with a message
3085directing the user to the header file which should be used instead.
3086
3087Neither @samp{#error} nor @samp{#warning} macro-expands its argument.
3088Internal whitespace sequences are each replaced with a single space.
3089The line must consist of complete tokens.  It is wisest to make the
3090argument of these directives be a single string constant; this avoids
3091problems with apostrophes and the like.
3092
3093@node Line Control
3094@chapter Line Control
3095@cindex line control
3096
3097The C preprocessor informs the C compiler of the location in your source
3098code where each token came from.  Presently, this is just the file name
3099and line number.  All the tokens resulting from macro expansion are
3100reported as having appeared on the line of the source file where the
3101outermost macro was used.  We intend to be more accurate in the future.
3102
3103If you write a program which generates source code, such as the
3104@command{bison} parser generator, you may want to adjust the preprocessor's
3105notion of the current file name and line number by hand.  Parts of the
3106output from @command{bison} are generated from scratch, other parts come
3107from a standard parser file.  The rest are copied verbatim from
3108@command{bison}'s input.  You would like compiler error messages and
3109symbolic debuggers to be able to refer to @code{bison}'s input file.
3110
3111@findex #line
3112@command{bison} or any such program can arrange this by writing
3113@samp{#line} directives into the output file.  @samp{#line} is a
3114directive that specifies the original line number and source file name
3115for subsequent input in the current preprocessor input file.
3116@samp{#line} has three variants:
3117
3118@table @code
3119@item #line @var{linenum}
3120@var{linenum} is a non-negative decimal integer constant.  It specifies
3121the line number which should be reported for the following line of
3122input.  Subsequent lines are counted from @var{linenum}.
3123
3124@item #line @var{linenum} @var{filename}
3125@var{linenum} is the same as for the first form, and has the same
3126effect.  In addition, @var{filename} is a string constant.  The
3127following line and all subsequent lines are reported to come from the
3128file it specifies, until something else happens to change that.
3129@var{filename} is interpreted according to the normal rules for a string
3130constant: backslash escapes are interpreted.  This is different from
3131@samp{#include}.
3132
3133Previous versions of CPP did not interpret escapes in @samp{#line};
3134we have changed it because the standard requires they be interpreted,
3135and most other compilers do.
3136
3137@item #line @var{anything else}
3138@var{anything else} is checked for macro calls, which are expanded.
3139The result should match one of the above two forms.
3140@end table
3141
3142@samp{#line} directives alter the results of the @code{__FILE__} and
3143@code{__LINE__} predefined macros from that point on.  @xref{Standard
3144Predefined Macros}.  They do not have any effect on @samp{#include}'s
3145idea of the directory containing the current file.  This is a change
3146from GCC 2.95.  Previously, a file reading
3147
3148@smallexample
3149#line 1 "../src/gram.y"
3150#include "gram.h"
3151@end smallexample
3152
3153would search for @file{gram.h} in @file{../src}, then the @option{-I}
3154chain; the directory containing the physical source file would not be
3155searched.  In GCC 3.0 and later, the @samp{#include} is not affected by
3156the presence of a @samp{#line} referring to a different directory.
3157
3158We made this change because the old behavior caused problems when
3159generated source files were transported between machines.  For instance,
3160it is common practice to ship generated parsers with a source release,
3161so that people building the distribution do not need to have yacc or
3162Bison installed.  These files frequently have @samp{#line} directives
3163referring to the directory tree of the system where the distribution was
3164created.  If GCC tries to search for headers in those directories, the
3165build is likely to fail.
3166
3167The new behavior can cause failures too, if the generated file is not
3168in the same directory as its source and it attempts to include a header
3169which would be visible searching from the directory containing the
3170source file.  However, this problem is easily solved with an additional
3171@option{-I} switch on the command line.  The failures caused by the old
3172semantics could sometimes be corrected only by editing the generated
3173files, which is difficult and error-prone.
3174
3175@node Pragmas
3176@chapter Pragmas
3177
3178The @samp{#pragma} directive is the method specified by the C standard
3179for providing additional information to the compiler, beyond what is
3180conveyed in the language itself.  Three forms of this directive
3181(commonly known as @dfn{pragmas}) are specified by the 1999 C standard.
3182A C compiler is free to attach any meaning it likes to other pragmas.
3183
3184GCC has historically preferred to use extensions to the syntax of the
3185language, such as @code{__attribute__}, for this purpose.  However, GCC
3186does define a few pragmas of its own.  These mostly have effects on the
3187entire translation unit or source file.
3188
3189In GCC version 3, all GNU-defined, supported pragmas have been given a
3190@code{GCC} prefix.  This is in line with the @code{STDC} prefix on all
3191pragmas defined by C99.  For backward compatibility, pragmas which were
3192recognized by previous versions are still recognized without the
3193@code{GCC} prefix, but that usage is deprecated.  Some older pragmas are
3194deprecated in their entirety.  They are not recognized with the
3195@code{GCC} prefix.  @xref{Obsolete Features}.
3196
3197@cindex @code{_Pragma}
3198C99 introduces the @code{@w{_Pragma}} operator.  This feature addresses a
3199major problem with @samp{#pragma}: being a directive, it cannot be
3200produced as the result of macro expansion.  @code{@w{_Pragma}} is an
3201operator, much like @code{sizeof} or @code{defined}, and can be embedded
3202in a macro.
3203
3204Its syntax is @code{@w{_Pragma (@var{string-literal})}}, where
3205@var{string-literal} can be either a normal or wide-character string
3206literal.  It is destringized, by replacing all @samp{\\} with a single
3207@samp{\} and all @samp{\"} with a @samp{"}.  The result is then
3208processed as if it had appeared as the right hand side of a
3209@samp{#pragma} directive.  For example,
3210
3211@example
3212_Pragma ("GCC dependency \"parse.y\"")
3213@end example
3214
3215@noindent
3216has the same effect as @code{#pragma GCC dependency "parse.y"}.  The
3217same effect could be achieved using macros, for example
3218
3219@example
3220#define DO_PRAGMA(x) _Pragma (#x)
3221DO_PRAGMA (GCC dependency "parse.y")
3222@end example
3223
3224The standard is unclear on where a @code{_Pragma} operator can appear.
3225The preprocessor does not accept it within a preprocessing conditional
3226directive like @samp{#if}.  To be safe, you are probably best keeping it
3227out of directives other than @samp{#define}, and putting it on a line of
3228its own.
3229
3230This manual documents the pragmas which are meaningful to the
3231preprocessor itself.  Other pragmas are meaningful to the C or C++
3232compilers.  They are documented in the GCC manual.
3233
3234@ftable @code
3235@item #pragma GCC dependency
3236@code{#pragma GCC dependency} allows you to check the relative dates of
3237the current file and another file.  If the other file is more recent than
3238the current file, a warning is issued.  This is useful if the current
3239file is derived from the other file, and should be regenerated.  The
3240other file is searched for using the normal include search path.
3241Optional trailing text can be used to give more information in the
3242warning message.
3243
3244@example
3245#pragma GCC dependency "parse.y"
3246#pragma GCC dependency "/usr/include/time.h" rerun fixincludes
3247@end example
3248
3249@item #pragma GCC poison
3250Sometimes, there is an identifier that you want to remove completely
3251from your program, and make sure that it never creeps back in.  To
3252enforce this, you can @dfn{poison} the identifier with this pragma.
3253@code{#pragma GCC poison} is followed by a list of identifiers to
3254poison.  If any of those identifiers appears anywhere in the source
3255after the directive, it is a hard error.  For example,
3256
3257@example
3258#pragma GCC poison printf sprintf fprintf
3259sprintf(some_string, "hello");
3260@end example
3261
3262@noindent
3263will produce an error.
3264
3265If a poisoned identifier appears as part of the expansion of a macro
3266which was defined before the identifier was poisoned, it will @emph{not}
3267cause an error.  This lets you poison an identifier without worrying
3268about system headers defining macros that use it.
3269
3270For example,
3271
3272@example
3273#define strrchr rindex
3274#pragma GCC poison rindex
3275strrchr(some_string, 'h');
3276@end example
3277
3278@noindent
3279will not produce an error.
3280
3281@item #pragma GCC system_header
3282This pragma takes no arguments.  It causes the rest of the code in the
3283current file to be treated as if it came from a system header.
3284@xref{System Headers}.
3285
3286@end ftable
3287
3288@node Other Directives
3289@chapter Other Directives
3290
3291@findex #ident
3292The @samp{#ident} directive takes one argument, a string constant.  On
3293some systems, that string constant is copied into a special segment of
3294the object file.  On other systems, the directive is ignored.
3295
3296This directive is not part of the C standard, but it is not an official
3297GNU extension either.  We believe it came from System V@.
3298
3299@findex #sccs
3300The @samp{#sccs} directive is recognized, because it appears in the
3301header files of some systems.  It is a very old, obscure, extension
3302which we did not invent, and we have been unable to find any
3303documentation of what it should do, so GCC simply ignores it.
3304
3305@cindex null directive
3306The @dfn{null directive} consists of a @samp{#} followed by a newline,
3307with only whitespace (including comments) in between.  A null directive
3308is understood as a preprocessing directive but has no effect on the
3309preprocessor output.  The primary significance of the existence of the
3310null directive is that an input line consisting of just a @samp{#} will
3311produce no output, rather than a line of output containing just a
3312@samp{#}.  Supposedly some old C programs contain such lines.
3313
3314@node Preprocessor Output
3315@chapter Preprocessor Output
3316
3317When the C preprocessor is used with the C, C++, or Objective-C
3318compilers, it is integrated into the compiler and communicates a stream
3319of binary tokens directly to the compiler's parser.  However, it can
3320also be used in the more conventional standalone mode, where it produces
3321textual output.
3322@c FIXME: Document the library interface.
3323
3324@cindex output format
3325The output from the C preprocessor looks much like the input, except
3326that all preprocessing directive lines have been replaced with blank
3327lines and all comments with spaces.  Long runs of blank lines are
3328discarded.
3329
3330The ISO standard specifies that it is implementation defined whether a
3331preprocessor preserves whitespace between tokens, or replaces it with
3332e.g.@: a single space.  In GNU CPP, whitespace between tokens is collapsed
3333to become a single space, with the exception that the first token on a
3334non-directive line is preceded with sufficient spaces that it appears in
3335the same column in the preprocessed output that it appeared in the
3336original source file.  This is so the output is easy to read.
3337@xref{Differences from previous versions}.  CPP does not insert any
3338whitespace where there was none in the original source, except where
3339necessary to prevent an accidental token paste.
3340
3341@cindex linemarkers
3342Source file name and line number information is conveyed by lines
3343of the form
3344
3345@example
3346# @var{linenum} @var{filename} @var{flags}
3347@end example
3348
3349@noindent
3350These are called @dfn{linemarkers}.  They are inserted as needed into
3351the output (but never within a string or character constant).  They mean
3352that the following line originated in file @var{filename} at line
3353@var{linenum}.  @var{filename} will never contain any non-printing
3354characters; they are replaced with octal escape sequences.
3355
3356After the file name comes zero or more flags, which are @samp{1},
3357@samp{2}, @samp{3}, or @samp{4}.  If there are multiple flags, spaces
3358separate them.  Here is what the flags mean:
3359
3360@table @samp
3361@item 1
3362This indicates the start of a new file.
3363@item 2
3364This indicates returning to a file (after having included another file).
3365@item 3
3366This indicates that the following text comes from a system header file,
3367so certain warnings should be suppressed.
3368@item 4
3369This indicates that the following text should be treated as being
3370wrapped in an implicit @code{extern "C"} block.
3371@c maybe cross reference NO_IMPLICIT_EXTERN_C
3372@end table
3373
3374As an extension, the preprocessor accepts linemarkers in non-assembler
3375input files.  They are treated like the corresponding @samp{#line}
3376directive, (@pxref{Line Control}), except that trailing flags are
3377permitted, and are interpreted with the meanings described above.  If
3378multiple flags are given, they must be in ascending order.
3379
3380Some directives may be duplicated in the output of the preprocessor.
3381These are @samp{#ident} (always), @samp{#pragma} (only if the
3382preprocessor does not handle the pragma itself), and @samp{#define} and
3383@samp{#undef} (with certain debugging options).  If this happens, the
3384@samp{#} of the directive will always be in the first column, and there
3385will be no space between the @samp{#} and the directive name.  If macro
3386expansion happens to generate tokens which might be mistaken for a
3387duplicated directive, a space will be inserted between the @samp{#} and
3388the directive name.
3389
3390@node Traditional Mode
3391@chapter Traditional Mode
3392
3393Traditional (pre-standard) C preprocessing is rather different from
3394the preprocessing specified by the standard.  When GCC is given the
3395@option{-traditional-cpp} option, it attempts to emulate a traditional
3396preprocessor.
3397
3398GCC versions 3.2 and later only support traditional mode semantics in
3399the preprocessor, and not in the compiler front ends.  This chapter
3400outlines the traditional preprocessor semantics we implemented.
3401
3402The implementation does not correspond precisely to the behavior of
3403earlier versions of GCC, nor to any true traditional preprocessor.
3404After all, inconsistencies among traditional implementations were a
3405major motivation for C standardization.  However, we intend that it
3406should be compatible with true traditional preprocessors in all ways
3407that actually matter.
3408
3409@menu
3410* Traditional lexical analysis::
3411* Traditional macros::
3412* Traditional miscellany::
3413* Traditional warnings::
3414@end menu
3415
3416@node Traditional lexical analysis
3417@section Traditional lexical analysis
3418
3419The traditional preprocessor does not decompose its input into tokens
3420the same way a standards-conforming preprocessor does.  The input is
3421simply treated as a stream of text with minimal internal form.
3422
3423This implementation does not treat trigraphs (@pxref{trigraphs})
3424specially since they were an invention of the standards committee.  It
3425handles arbitrarily-positioned escaped newlines properly and splices
3426the lines as you would expect; many traditional preprocessors did not
3427do this.
3428
3429The form of horizontal whitespace in the input file is preserved in
3430the output.  In particular, hard tabs remain hard tabs.  This can be
3431useful if, for example, you are preprocessing a Makefile.
3432
3433Traditional CPP only recognizes C-style block comments, and treats the
3434@samp{/*} sequence as introducing a comment only if it lies outside
3435quoted text.  Quoted text is introduced by the usual single and double
3436quotes, and also by an initial @samp{<} in a @code{#include}
3437directive.
3438
3439Traditionally, comments are completely removed and are not replaced
3440with a space.  Since a traditional compiler does its own tokenization
3441of the output of the preprocessor, this means that comments can
3442effectively be used as token paste operators.  However, comments
3443behave like separators for text handled by the preprocessor itself,
3444since it doesn't re-lex its input.  For example, in
3445
3446@smallexample
3447#if foo/**/bar
3448@end smallexample
3449
3450@noindent
3451@samp{foo} and @samp{bar} are distinct identifiers and expanded
3452separately if they happen to be macros.  In other words, this
3453directive is equivalent to
3454
3455@smallexample
3456#if foo bar
3457@end smallexample
3458
3459@noindent
3460rather than
3461
3462@smallexample
3463#if foobar
3464@end smallexample
3465
3466Generally speaking, in traditional mode an opening quote need not have
3467a matching closing quote.  In particular, a macro may be defined with
3468replacement text that contains an unmatched quote.  Of course, if you
3469attempt to compile preprocessed output containing an unmatched quote
3470you will get a syntax error.
3471
3472However, all preprocessing directives other than @code{#define}
3473require matching quotes.  For example:
3474
3475@smallexample
3476#define m This macro's fine and has an unmatched quote
3477"/* This is not a comment.  */
3478/* This is a comment.  The following #include directive
3479   is ill-formed.  */
3480#include <stdio.h
3481@end smallexample
3482
3483Just as for the ISO preprocessor, what would be a closing quote can be
3484escaped with a backslash to prevent the quoted text from closing.
3485
3486@node Traditional macros
3487@section Traditional macros
3488
3489The major difference between traditional and ISO macros is that the
3490former expand to text rather than to a token sequence.  CPP removes
3491all leading and trailing horizontal whitespace from a macro's
3492replacement text before storing it, but preserves the form of internal
3493whitespace.
3494
3495One consequence is that it is legitimate for the replacement text to
3496contain an unmatched quote (@pxref{Traditional lexical analysis}). An
3497unclosed string or character constant continues into the text
3498following the macro call.  Similarly, the text at the end of a macro's
3499expansion can run together with the text after the macro invocation to
3500produce a single token.
3501
3502Normally comments are removed from the replacement text after the
3503macro is expanded, but if the @option{-CC} option is passed on the
3504command line comments are preserved.  (In fact, the current
3505implementation removes comments even before saving the macro
3506replacement text, but it careful to do it in such a way that the
3507observed effect is identical even in the function-like macro case.)
3508
3509The ISO stringification operator @samp{#} and token paste operator
3510@samp{##} have no special meaning.  As explained later, an effect
3511similar to these operators can be obtained in a different way.  Macro
3512names that are embedded in quotes, either from the main file or after
3513macro replacement, do not expand.
3514
3515CPP replaces an unquoted object-like macro name with its replacement
3516text, and then rescans it for further macros to replace.  Unlike
3517standard macro expansion, traditional macro expansion has no provision
3518to prevent recursion.  If an object-like macro appears unquoted in its
3519replacement text, it will be replaced again during the rescan pass,
3520and so on @emph{ad infinitum}.  GCC detects when it is expanding
3521recursive macros, emits an error message, and continues after the
3522offending macro invocation.
3523
3524@smallexample
3525#define PLUS +
3526#define INC(x) PLUS+x
3527INC(foo);
3528     @expansion{} ++foo;
3529@end smallexample
3530
3531Function-like macros are similar in form but quite different in
3532behavior to their ISO counterparts.  Their arguments are contained
3533within parentheses, are comma-separated, and can cross physical lines.
3534Commas within nested parentheses are not treated as argument
3535separators.  Similarly, a quote in an argument cannot be left
3536unclosed; a following comma or parenthesis that comes before the
3537closing quote is treated like any other character.  There is no
3538facility for handling variadic macros.
3539
3540This implementation removes all comments from macro arguments, unless
3541the @option{-C} option is given.  The form of all other horizontal
3542whitespace in arguments is preserved, including leading and trailing
3543whitespace.  In particular
3544
3545@smallexample
3546f( )
3547@end smallexample
3548
3549@noindent
3550is treated as an invocation of the macro @samp{f} with a single
3551argument consisting of a single space.  If you want to invoke a
3552function-like macro that takes no arguments, you must not leave any
3553whitespace between the parentheses.
3554
3555If a macro argument crosses a new line, the new line is replaced with
3556a space when forming the argument.  If the previous line contained an
3557unterminated quote, the following line inherits the quoted state.
3558
3559Traditional preprocessors replace parameters in the replacement text
3560with their arguments regardless of whether the parameters are within
3561quotes or not.  This provides a way to stringize arguments.  For
3562example
3563
3564@smallexample
3565#define str(x) "x"
3566str(/* A comment */some text )
3567     @expansion{} "some text "
3568@end smallexample
3569
3570@noindent
3571Note that the comment is removed, but that the trailing space is
3572preserved.  Here is an example of using a comment to effect token
3573pasting.
3574
3575@smallexample
3576#define suffix(x) foo_/**/x
3577suffix(bar)
3578     @expansion{} foo_bar
3579@end smallexample
3580
3581@node Traditional miscellany
3582@section Traditional miscellany
3583
3584Here are some things to be aware of when using the traditional
3585preprocessor.
3586
3587@itemize @bullet
3588@item
3589Preprocessing directives are recognized only when their leading
3590@samp{#} appears in the first column.  There can be no whitespace
3591between the beginning of the line and the @samp{#}, but whitespace can
3592follow the @samp{#}.
3593
3594@item
3595A true traditional C preprocessor does not recognize @samp{#error} or
3596@samp{#pragma}, and may not recognize @samp{#elif}.  CPP supports all
3597the directives in traditional mode that it supports in ISO mode,
3598including extensions, with the exception that the effects of
3599@samp{#pragma GCC poison} are undefined.
3600
3601@item
3602__STDC__ is not defined.
3603
3604@item
3605If you use digraphs the behavior is undefined.
3606
3607@item
3608If a line that looks like a directive appears within macro arguments,
3609the behavior is undefined.
3610
3611@end itemize
3612
3613@node Traditional warnings
3614@section Traditional warnings
3615You can request warnings about features that did not exist, or worked
3616differently, in traditional C with the @option{-Wtraditional} option.
3617GCC does not warn about features of ISO C which you must use when you
3618are using a conforming compiler, such as the @samp{#} and @samp{##}
3619operators.
3620
3621Presently @option{-Wtraditional} warns about:
3622
3623@itemize @bullet
3624@item
3625Macro parameters that appear within string literals in the macro body.
3626In traditional C macro replacement takes place within string literals,
3627but does not in ISO C@.
3628
3629@item
3630In traditional C, some preprocessor directives did not exist.
3631Traditional preprocessors would only consider a line to be a directive
3632if the @samp{#} appeared in column 1 on the line.  Therefore
3633@option{-Wtraditional} warns about directives that traditional C
3634understands but would ignore because the @samp{#} does not appear as the
3635first character on the line.  It also suggests you hide directives like
3636@samp{#pragma} not understood by traditional C by indenting them.  Some
3637traditional implementations would not recognize @samp{#elif}, so it
3638suggests avoiding it altogether.
3639
3640@item
3641A function-like macro that appears without an argument list.  In some
3642traditional preprocessors this was an error.  In ISO C it merely means
3643that the macro is not expanded.
3644
3645@item
3646The unary plus operator.  This did not exist in traditional C@.
3647
3648@item
3649The @samp{U} and @samp{LL} integer constant suffixes, which were not
3650available in traditional C@.  (Traditional C does support the @samp{L}
3651suffix for simple long integer constants.)  You are not warned about
3652uses of these suffixes in macros defined in system headers.  For
3653instance, @code{UINT_MAX} may well be defined as @code{4294967295U}, but
3654you will not be warned if you use @code{UINT_MAX}.
3655
3656You can usually avoid the warning, and the related warning about
3657constants which are so large that they are unsigned, by writing the
3658integer constant in question in hexadecimal, with no U suffix.  Take
3659care, though, because this gives the wrong result in exotic cases.
3660@end itemize
3661
3662@node Implementation Details
3663@chapter Implementation Details
3664
3665Here we document details of how the preprocessor's implementation
3666affects its user-visible behavior.  You should try to avoid undue
3667reliance on behavior described here, as it is possible that it will
3668change subtly in future implementations.
3669
3670Also documented here are obsolete features and changes from previous
3671versions of CPP@.
3672
3673@menu
3674* Implementation-defined behavior::
3675* Implementation limits::
3676* Obsolete Features::
3677* Differences from previous versions::
3678@end menu
3679
3680@node Implementation-defined behavior
3681@section Implementation-defined behavior
3682@cindex implementation-defined behavior
3683
3684This is how CPP behaves in all the cases which the C standard
3685describes as @dfn{implementation-defined}.  This term means that the
3686implementation is free to do what it likes, but must document its choice
3687and stick to it.
3688@c FIXME: Check the C++ standard for more implementation-defined stuff.
3689
3690@itemize @bullet
3691@need 1000
3692@item The mapping of physical source file multi-byte characters to the
3693execution character set.
3694
3695Currently, GNU cpp only supports character sets that are strict supersets
3696of ASCII, and performs no translation of characters.
3697
3698@item Non-empty sequences of whitespace characters.
3699
3700In textual output, each whitespace sequence is collapsed to a single
3701space.  For aesthetic reasons, the first token on each non-directive
3702line of output is preceded with sufficient spaces that it appears in the
3703same column as it did in the original source file.
3704
3705@item The numeric value of character constants in preprocessor expressions.
3706
3707The preprocessor and compiler interpret character constants in the
3708same way; i.e.@: escape sequences such as @samp{\a} are given the
3709values they would have on the target machine.
3710
3711The compiler values a multi-character character constant a character
3712at a time, shifting the previous value left by the number of bits per
3713target character, and then or-ing in the bit-pattern of the new
3714character truncated to the width of a target character.  The final
3715bit-pattern is given type @code{int}, and is therefore signed,
3716regardless of whether single characters are signed or not (a slight
3717change from versions 3.1 and earlier of GCC).  If there are more
3718characters in the constant than would fit in the target @code{int} the
3719compiler issues a warning, and the excess leading characters are
3720ignored.
3721
3722For example, 'ab' for a target with an 8-bit @code{char} would be
3723interpreted as @w{(int) ((unsigned char) 'a' * 256 + (unsigned char)
3724'b')}, and '\234a' as @w{(int) ((unsigned char) '\234' * 256 + (unsigned
3725char) 'a')}.
3726
3727@item Source file inclusion.
3728
3729For a discussion on how the preprocessor locates header files,
3730@ref{Include Operation}.
3731
3732@item Interpretation of the filename resulting from a macro-expanded
3733@samp{#include} directive.
3734
3735@xref{Computed Includes}.
3736
3737@item Treatment of a @samp{#pragma} directive that after macro-expansion
3738results in a standard pragma.
3739
3740No macro expansion occurs on any @samp{#pragma} directive line, so the
3741question does not arise.
3742
3743Note that GCC does not yet implement any of the standard
3744pragmas.
3745
3746@end itemize
3747
3748@node Implementation limits
3749@section Implementation limits
3750@cindex implementation limits
3751
3752CPP has a small number of internal limits.  This section lists the
3753limits which the C standard requires to be no lower than some minimum,
3754and all the others we are aware of.  We intend there to be as few limits
3755as possible.  If you encounter an undocumented or inconvenient limit,
3756please report that to us as a bug.  (See the section on reporting bugs in
3757the GCC manual.)
3758
3759Where we say something is limited @dfn{only by available memory}, that
3760means that internal data structures impose no intrinsic limit, and space
3761is allocated with @code{malloc} or equivalent.  The actual limit will
3762therefore depend on many things, such as the size of other things
3763allocated by the compiler at the same time, the amount of memory
3764consumed by other processes on the same computer, etc.
3765
3766@itemize @bullet
3767
3768@item Nesting levels of @samp{#include} files.
3769
3770We impose an arbitrary limit of 200 levels, to avoid runaway recursion.
3771The standard requires at least 15 levels.
3772
3773@item Nesting levels of conditional inclusion.
3774
3775The C standard mandates this be at least 63.  CPP is limited only by
3776available memory.
3777
3778@item Levels of parenthesized expressions within a full expression.
3779
3780The C standard requires this to be at least 63.  In preprocessor
3781conditional expressions, it is limited only by available memory.
3782
3783@item Significant initial characters in an identifier or macro name.
3784
3785The preprocessor treats all characters as significant.  The C standard
3786requires only that the first 63 be significant.
3787
3788@item Number of macros simultaneously defined in a single translation unit.
3789
3790The standard requires at least 4095 be possible.  CPP is limited only
3791by available memory.
3792
3793@item Number of parameters in a macro definition and arguments in a macro call.
3794
3795We allow @code{USHRT_MAX}, which is no smaller than 65,535.  The minimum
3796required by the standard is 127.
3797
3798@item Number of characters on a logical source line.
3799
3800The C standard requires a minimum of 4096 be permitted.  CPP places
3801no limits on this, but you may get incorrect column numbers reported in
3802diagnostics for lines longer than 65,535 characters.
3803
3804@item Maximum size of a source file.
3805
3806The standard does not specify any lower limit on the maximum size of a
3807source file.  GNU cpp maps files into memory, so it is limited by the
3808available address space.  This is generally at least two gigabytes.
3809Depending on the operating system, the size of physical memory may or
3810may not be a limitation.
3811
3812@end itemize
3813
3814@node Obsolete Features
3815@section Obsolete Features
3816
3817CPP has a number of features which are present mainly for
3818compatibility with older programs.  We discourage their use in new code.
3819In some cases, we plan to remove the feature in a future version of GCC@.
3820
3821@menu
3822* Assertions::
3823* Obsolete once-only headers::
3824@end menu
3825
3826@node Assertions
3827@subsection Assertions
3828@cindex assertions
3829
3830@dfn{Assertions} are a deprecated alternative to macros in writing
3831conditionals to test what sort of computer or system the compiled
3832program will run on.  Assertions are usually predefined, but you can
3833define them with preprocessing directives or command-line options.
3834
3835Assertions were intended to provide a more systematic way to describe
3836the compiler's target system.  However, in practice they are just as
3837unpredictable as the system-specific predefined macros.  In addition, they
3838are not part of any standard, and only a few compilers support them.
3839Therefore, the use of assertions is @strong{less} portable than the use
3840of system-specific predefined macros.  We recommend you do not use them at
3841all.
3842
3843@cindex predicates
3844An assertion looks like this:
3845
3846@example
3847#@var{predicate} (@var{answer})
3848@end example
3849
3850@noindent
3851@var{predicate} must be a single identifier.  @var{answer} can be any
3852sequence of tokens; all characters are significant except for leading
3853and trailing whitespace, and differences in internal whitespace
3854sequences are ignored.  (This is similar to the rules governing macro
3855redefinition.)  Thus, @code{(x + y)} is different from @code{(x+y)} but
3856equivalent to @code{@w{( x + y )}}.  Parentheses do not nest inside an
3857answer.
3858
3859@cindex testing predicates
3860To test an assertion, you write it in an @samp{#if}.  For example, this
3861conditional succeeds if either @code{vax} or @code{ns16000} has been
3862asserted as an answer for @code{machine}.
3863
3864@example
3865#if #machine (vax) || #machine (ns16000)
3866@end example
3867
3868@noindent
3869You can test whether @emph{any} answer is asserted for a predicate by
3870omitting the answer in the conditional:
3871
3872@example
3873#if #machine
3874@end example
3875
3876@findex #assert
3877Assertions are made with the @samp{#assert} directive.  Its sole
3878argument is the assertion to make, without the leading @samp{#} that
3879identifies assertions in conditionals.
3880
3881@example
3882#assert @var{predicate} (@var{answer})
3883@end example
3884
3885@noindent
3886You may make several assertions with the same predicate and different
3887answers.  Subsequent assertions do not override previous ones for the
3888same predicate.  All the answers for any given predicate are
3889simultaneously true.
3890
3891@cindex assertions, canceling
3892@findex #unassert
3893Assertions can be canceled with the @samp{#unassert} directive.  It
3894has the same syntax as @samp{#assert}.  In that form it cancels only the
3895answer which was specified on the @samp{#unassert} line; other answers
3896for that predicate remain true.  You can cancel an entire predicate by
3897leaving out the answer:
3898
3899@example
3900#unassert @var{predicate}
3901@end example
3902
3903@noindent
3904In either form, if no such assertion has been made, @samp{#unassert} has
3905no effect.
3906
3907You can also make or cancel assertions using command line options.
3908@xref{Invocation}.
3909
3910@node Obsolete once-only headers
3911@subsection Obsolete once-only headers
3912
3913CPP supports two more ways of indicating that a header file should be
3914read only once.  Neither one is as portable as a wrapper @samp{#ifndef},
3915and we recommend you do not use them in new programs.
3916
3917@findex #import
3918In the Objective-C language, there is a variant of @samp{#include}
3919called @samp{#import} which includes a file, but does so at most once.
3920If you use @samp{#import} instead of @samp{#include}, then you don't
3921need the conditionals inside the header file to prevent multiple
3922inclusion of the contents.  GCC permits the use of @samp{#import} in C
3923and C++ as well as Objective-C@.  However, it is not in standard C or C++
3924and should therefore not be used by portable programs.
3925
3926@samp{#import} is not a well designed feature.  It requires the users of
3927a header file to know that it should only be included once.  It is much
3928better for the header file's implementor to write the file so that users
3929don't need to know this.  Using a wrapper @samp{#ifndef} accomplishes
3930this goal.
3931
3932In the present implementation, a single use of @samp{#import} will
3933prevent the file from ever being read again, by either @samp{#import} or
3934@samp{#include}.  You should not rely on this; do not use both
3935@samp{#import} and @samp{#include} to refer to the same header file.
3936
3937Another way to prevent a header file from being included more than once
3938is with the @samp{#pragma once} directive.  If @samp{#pragma once} is
3939seen when scanning a header file, that file will never be read again, no
3940matter what.
3941
3942@samp{#pragma once} does not have the problems that @samp{#import} does,
3943but it is not recognized by all preprocessors, so you cannot rely on it
3944in a portable program.
3945
3946@node Differences from previous versions
3947@section Differences from previous versions
3948@cindex differences from previous versions
3949
3950This section details behavior which has changed from previous versions
3951of CPP@.  We do not plan to change it again in the near future, but
3952we do not promise not to, either.
3953
3954The ``previous versions'' discussed here are 2.95 and before.  The
3955behavior of GCC 3.0 is mostly the same as the behavior of the widely
3956used 2.96 and 2.97 development snapshots.  Where there are differences,
3957they generally represent bugs in the snapshots.
3958
3959@itemize @bullet
3960
3961@item Order of evaluation of @samp{#} and @samp{##} operators
3962
3963The standard does not specify the order of evaluation of a chain of
3964@samp{##} operators, nor whether @samp{#} is evaluated before, after, or
3965at the same time as @samp{##}.  You should therefore not write any code
3966which depends on any specific ordering.  It is possible to guarantee an
3967ordering, if you need one, by suitable use of nested macros.
3968
3969An example of where this might matter is pasting the arguments @samp{1},
3970@samp{e} and @samp{-2}.  This would be fine for left-to-right pasting,
3971but right-to-left pasting would produce an invalid token @samp{e-2}.
3972
3973GCC 3.0 evaluates @samp{#} and @samp{##} at the same time and strictly
3974left to right.  Older versions evaluated all @samp{#} operators first,
3975then all @samp{##} operators, in an unreliable order.
3976
3977@item The form of whitespace between tokens in preprocessor output
3978
3979@xref{Preprocessor Output}, for the current textual format.  This is
3980also the format used by stringification.  Normally, the preprocessor
3981communicates tokens directly to the compiler's parser, and whitespace
3982does not come up at all.
3983
3984Older versions of GCC preserved all whitespace provided by the user and
3985inserted lots more whitespace of their own, because they could not
3986accurately predict when extra spaces were needed to prevent accidental
3987token pasting.
3988
3989@item Optional argument when invoking rest argument macros
3990
3991As an extension, GCC permits you to omit the variable arguments entirely
3992when you use a variable argument macro.  This is forbidden by the 1999 C
3993standard, and will provoke a pedantic warning with GCC 3.0.  Previous
3994versions accepted it silently.
3995
3996@item @samp{##} swallowing preceding text in rest argument macros
3997
3998Formerly, in a macro expansion, if @samp{##} appeared before a variable
3999arguments parameter, and the set of tokens specified for that argument
4000in the macro invocation was empty, previous versions of CPP would
4001back up and remove the preceding sequence of non-whitespace characters
4002(@strong{not} the preceding token).  This extension is in direct
4003conflict with the 1999 C standard and has been drastically pared back.
4004
4005In the current version of the preprocessor, if @samp{##} appears between
4006a comma and a variable arguments parameter, and the variable argument is
4007omitted entirely, the comma will be removed from the expansion.  If the
4008variable argument is empty, or the token before @samp{##} is not a
4009comma, then @samp{##} behaves as a normal token paste.
4010
4011@item @samp{#line} and @samp{#include}
4012
4013The @samp{#line} directive used to change GCC's notion of the
4014``directory containing the current file,'' used by @samp{#include} with
4015a double-quoted header file name.  In 3.0 and later, it does not.
4016@xref{Line Control}, for further explanation.
4017
4018@item Syntax of @samp{#line}
4019
4020In GCC 2.95 and previous, the string constant argument to @samp{#line}
4021was treated the same way as the argument to @samp{#include}: backslash
4022escapes were not honored, and the string ended at the second @samp{"}.
4023This is not compliant with the C standard.  In GCC 3.0, an attempt was
4024made to correct the behavior, so that the string was treated as a real
4025string constant, but it turned out to be buggy.  In 3.1, the bugs have
4026been fixed.  (We are not fixing the bugs in 3.0 because they affect
4027relatively few people and the fix is quite invasive.)
4028
4029@end itemize
4030
4031@node Invocation
4032@chapter Invocation
4033@cindex invocation
4034@cindex command line
4035
4036Most often when you use the C preprocessor you will not have to invoke it
4037explicitly: the C compiler will do so automatically.  However, the
4038preprocessor is sometimes useful on its own.  All the options listed
4039here are also acceptable to the C compiler and have the same meaning,
4040except that the C compiler has different rules for specifying the output
4041file.
4042
4043@strong{Note:} Whether you use the preprocessor by way of @command{gcc}
4044or @command{cpp}, the @dfn{compiler driver} is run first.  This
4045program's purpose is to translate your command into invocations of the
4046programs that do the actual work.  Their command line interfaces are
4047similar but not identical to the documented interface, and may change
4048without notice.
4049
4050@ignore
4051@c man begin SYNOPSIS
4052cpp [@option{-D}@var{macro}[=@var{defn}]@dots{}] [@option{-U}@var{macro}]
4053    [@option{-I}@var{dir}@dots{}] [@option{-W}@var{warn}@dots{}]
4054    [@option{-M}|@option{-MM}] [@option{-MG}] [@option{-MF} @var{filename}]
4055    [@option{-MP}] [@option{-MQ} @var{target}@dots{}] [@option{-MT} @var{target}@dots{}]
4056    [@option{-x} @var{language}] [@option{-std=}@var{standard}]
4057    @var{infile} @var{outfile}
4058
4059Only the most useful options are listed here; see below for the remainder.
4060@c man end
4061@c man begin SEEALSO
4062gpl(7), gfdl(7), fsf-funding(7),
4063gcc(1), as(1), ld(1), and the Info entries for @file{cpp}, @file{gcc}, and
4064@file{binutils}.
4065@c man end
4066@end ignore
4067
4068@c man begin OPTIONS
4069The C preprocessor expects two file names as arguments, @var{infile} and
4070@var{outfile}.  The preprocessor reads @var{infile} together with any
4071other files it specifies with @samp{#include}.  All the output generated
4072by the combined input files is written in @var{outfile}.
4073
4074Either @var{infile} or @var{outfile} may be @option{-}, which as
4075@var{infile} means to read from standard input and as @var{outfile}
4076means to write to standard output.  Also, if either file is omitted, it
4077means the same as if @option{-} had been specified for that file.
4078
4079Unless otherwise noted, or the option ends in @samp{=}, all options
4080which take an argument may have that argument appear either immediately
4081after the option, or with a space between option and argument:
4082@option{-Ifoo} and @option{-I foo} have the same effect.
4083
4084@cindex grouping options
4085@cindex options, grouping
4086Many options have multi-letter names; therefore multiple single-letter
4087options may @emph{not} be grouped: @option{-dM} is very different from
4088@w{@samp{-d -M}}.
4089
4090@cindex options
4091@include cppopts.texi
4092@c man end
4093
4094@node Environment Variables
4095@chapter Environment Variables
4096@cindex environment variables
4097@c man begin ENVIRONMENT
4098
4099This section describes the environment variables that affect how CPP
4100operates.  You can use them to specify directories or prefixes to use
4101when searching for include files, or to control dependency output.
4102
4103Note that you can also specify places to search using options such as
4104@option{-I}, and control dependency output with options like
4105@option{-M} (@pxref{Invocation}).  These take precedence over
4106environment variables, which in turn take precedence over the
4107configuration of GCC@.
4108 
4109@include cppenv.texi
4110@c man end
4111
4112@page
4113@include fdl.texi
4114
4115@page
4116@node Index of Directives
4117@unnumbered Index of Directives
4118@printindex fn
4119
4120@node Option Index
4121@unnumbered Option Index
4122@noindent
4123CPP's command line options and environment variables are indexed here
4124without any initial @samp{-} or @samp{--}.
4125@printindex op
4126
4127@page
4128@node Concept Index
4129@unnumbered Concept Index
4130@printindex cp
4131
4132@bye
4133