Playing off of Michael E's comment:
#if defined(__GNUC__)
#define DEPRECATE(foo, msg) foo __attribute__((deprecated(msg)))
#elif defined(_MSC_VER)
#define DEPRECATE(foo, msg) __declspec(deprecated(msg)) foo
#else
#error This compiler is not supported
#endif
#define PP_CAT(x,y) PP_CAT1(x,y)
#define PP_CAT1(x,y) x##y
namespace detail
{
struct true_type {};
struct false_type {};
template <int test> struct converter : public true_type {};
template <> struct converter<0> : public false_type {};
}
#define STATIC_WARNING(cond, msg)
struct PP_CAT(static_warning,__LINE__) {
DEPRECATE(void _(::detail::false_type const& ),msg) {};
void _(::detail::true_type const& ) {};
PP_CAT(static_warning,__LINE__)() {_(::detail::converter<(cond)>());}
}
// Note: using STATIC_WARNING_TEMPLATE changes the meaning of a program in a small way.
// It introduces a member/variable declaration. This means at least one byte of space
// in each structure/class instantiation. STATIC_WARNING should be preferred in any
// non-template situation.
// 'token' must be a program-wide unique identifier.
#define STATIC_WARNING_TEMPLATE(token, cond, msg)
STATIC_WARNING(cond, msg) PP_CAT(PP_CAT(_localvar_, token),__LINE__)
The macro can be invoked at namespace, structure, and function scope. Given the input:
#line 1
STATIC_WARNING(1==2, "Failed with 1 and 2");
STATIC_WARNING(1<2, "Succeeded with 1 and 2");
struct Foo
{
STATIC_WARNING(2==3, "2 and 3: oops");
STATIC_WARNING(2<3, "2 and 3 worked");
};
void func()
{
STATIC_WARNING(3==4, "Not so good on 3 and 4");
STATIC_WARNING(3<4, "3 and 4, check");
}
template <typename T> struct wrap
{
typedef T type;
STATIC_WARNING(4==5, "Bad with 4 and 5");
STATIC_WARNING(4<5, "Good on 4 and 5");
STATIC_WARNING_TEMPLATE(WRAP_WARNING1, 4==5, "A template warning");
};
template struct wrap<int>;
GCC 4.6 (at default warning level) produces:
static_warning.cpp: In constructor ‘static_warning1::static_warning1()’:
static_warning.cpp:1:1: warning: ‘void static_warning1::_(const detail::false_type&)’
is deprecated (declared at static_warning.cpp:1): Failed with 1 and 2 [-Wdeprecated-declarations]
static_warning.cpp: In constructor ‘Foo::static_warning6::static_warning6()’:
static_warning.cpp:6:3: warning: ‘void Foo::static_warning6::_(const detail::false_type&)’
is deprecated (declared at static_warning.cpp:6): 2 and 3: oops [-Wdeprecated-declarations]
static_warning.cpp: In constructor ‘func()::static_warning12::static_warning12()’:
static_warning.cpp:12:3: warning: ‘void func()::static_warning12::_(const detail::false_type&)’
is deprecated (declared at static_warning.cpp:12): Not so good on 3 and 4 [-Wdeprecated-declarations]
static_warning.cpp: In constructor ‘wrap<T>::static_warning19::static_warning19() [with T = int]’:
static_warning.cpp:24:17: instantiated from here
static_warning.cpp:19:3: warning: ‘void wrap<T>::static_warning19::_(const detail::false_type&) [with T = int]’
is deprecated (declared at static_warning.cpp:19): Bad with 4 and 5 [-Wdeprecated-declarations]
While Visual C++ 2010 (at /W3 or above) says:
warnproj.cpp(1): warning C4996: 'static_warning1::_': Failed with 1 and 2
warnproj.cpp(1) : see declaration of 'static_warning1::_'
warnproj.cpp(6): warning C4996: 'Foo::static_warning6::_': 2 and 3: oops
warnproj.cpp(6) : see declaration of 'Foo::static_warning6::_'
warnproj.cpp(12): warning C4996: 'func::static_warning12::_': Not so good on 3 and 4
warnproj.cpp(12) : see declaration of 'func::static_warning12::_'
warnproj.cpp(19): warning C4996: 'wrap<T>::static_warning19::_': Bad with 4 and 5
with
[
T=int
]
warnproj.cpp(19) : see declaration of 'wrap<T>::static_warning19::_'
with
[
T=int
]
warnproj.cpp(19) : while compiling class template member function 'wrap<T>::static_warning19::static_warning19(void)'
with
[
T=int
]
warnproj.cpp(24) : see reference to class template instantiation 'wrap<T>::static_warning19' being compiled
with
[
T=int
]
Clang++ 3.1 on Linux produces the arguably nicer output (color not shown):
tst3.cpp:1:1: warning: '_' is deprecated: Failed with 1 and 2
[-Wdeprecated-declarations]
STATIC_WARNING(1==2, "Failed with 1 and 2");
^
tst3.cpp:24:38: note: expanded from macro 'STATIC_WARNING'
PP_CAT(static_warning,__LINE__)() {_(::detail::converter<(cond)>());}
^
tst3.cpp:6:3: warning: '_' is deprecated: 2 and 3: oops
[-Wdeprecated-declarations]
STATIC_WARNING(2==3, "2 and 3: oops");
^
tst3.cpp:24:38: note: expanded from macro 'STATIC_WARNING'
PP_CAT(static_warning,__LINE__)() {_(::detail::converter<(cond)>());}
^
tst3.cpp:12:3: warning: '_' is deprecated: Not so good on 3 and 4
[-Wdeprecated-declarations]
STATIC_WARNING(3==4, "Not so good on 3 and 4");
^
tst3.cpp:24:38: note: expanded from macro 'STATIC_WARNING'
PP_CAT(static_warning,__LINE__)() {_(::detail::converter<(cond)>());}
^
tst3.cpp:19:3: warning: '_' is deprecated: Bad with 4 and 5
[-Wdeprecated-declarations]
STATIC_WARNING(4==5, "Bad with 4 and 5");
^
tst3.cpp:24:38: note: expanded from macro 'STATIC_WARNING'
PP_CAT(static_warning,__LINE__)() {_(::detail::converter<(cond)>());}
^
tst3.cpp:23:17: note: in instantiation of member function
'wrap<int>::static_warning19::static_warning19' requested here
template struct wrap<int>
^
4 warnings generated.