I have several configuration files each one containing the definition of some boolean macro, to be set to 0 or 1. Then, in my code, I check the value of such a macro to decide which part of the code to activate. Now comes the tricky part: I want to be sure that the header containing the definition of my macro has been included.
In the following example, if I forget to include the header file containing FOO definition, the compiler will print "world!", while I would like instead that it generated an error.
//in the configuration header file
#define FOO 1
//in a cpp file
#if FOO //I would like this to generate an error if I forgot to include the header file
#pragma message "Hello"
#else
#pragma message "world!"
#endif
Is it possible to achieve such a behaviour? How?
To clarify, I am not asking how to generate an error if a macro is not defined, but if it is possible to transform the #if FOO
line so that, at the same time, it checks the boolean value and generates an error if FOO
is not defined.
The point of having this would be that developers would know that their code should contain
SPECIAL_MACRO(FOO)
which, at the same time, check the boolean value of FOO as if it was an #if FOO
statement, and prevents them from forgetting the inclusion of the header defining FOO
.
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