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CSc 352 An Introduction to the C Preprocessor Saumya Debray Dept. of Computer Science The University of Arizona, Tucson debray@cs.arizona.edu
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The C preprocessor and its role 2 cpp (C preprocessor) cc1 (C compiler) source program compiled code C compiler (e.g., gcc) expanded code expand some kinds of characters discard whitespace and comments – each comment is replaced with a single space process directives: – file inclusion (#include) – macro expansion (#define) – conditional compilation (#if, #ifdef, …) text: Ch. 14
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#include Specifies that the preprocessor should read in the contents of the specified file – usually used to read in type definitions, prototypes, etc. – proceeds recursively #includes in the included file are read in as well Two forms: – #include searches for filename from a predefined list of directories the list can be extended via “gcc – I dir” – #include “ filename ” looks for filename specified as a relative or absolute path 3
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#include : Example 4 a predefined include file that: comes with the system gives type declarations, prototypes for library routines (printf) where does it come from? – man 3 printf :
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#include: cont’d We can also define our own header files: – a header file has file-extension ‘.h’ – these header files typically contain “public” information type declarations macros and other definitions function prototypes – often, the public information associated with a code file foo.c will be placed in a header file foo.h – these header files are included by files that need that public information #include “myheaderfile.h” 5
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Macros A macro is a symbol that is recognized by the preprocessor and replaced by the macro body – Structure of simple macros: #define identifier replacement_list – Examples: #define BUFFERSZ 1024 #define WORDLEN 64 6
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Using simple macros We just use the macro name in place of the value, e.g.: #define BUFLEN 1024 #define Pi 3.1416 … char buffer[BUFLEN]; … area = Pi * r * r; 7 NOT: #define BUFLEN = 1024 #define Pi 3.1416;
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Example 1 8
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Example 2 9 we can “macroize” symbols selectively
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Parameterized macros Macros can have parameters – these resemble functions in some ways: macro definition ~ formal parameters macro use ~ actual arguments – Form: #define macroName(arg 1, …, arg n ) replacement_list – Example: #define deref(ptr) *ptr #define MAX(x,y) x > y ? x : y 10 no space here! (else preprocessor will assume we’re defining a simple macro
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Example 11
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Macros vs. functions Macros may be (slightly) faster – don’t incur the overhead of function call/return – however, the resulting code size is usually larger this can lead to loss of speed Macros are “generic” – parameters don’t have any associated type – arguments are not type-checked Macros may evaluate their arguments more than once – a function argument is only evaluated once per call 12
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Macros vs. Functions: Argument Evaluation Macros and functions may behave differently if an argument is referenced multiple times: – a function argument is evaluated once, before the call – a macro argument is evaluated each time it is encountered in the macro body. Example: 13 int dbl(x) { return x + x;} … u = 10; v = dbl(u++); printf(“u = %d, v = %d”, u, v); prints : u = 11, v = 20 #define Dbl(x) x + x … u = 10; v = Dbl(u++); printf(“u = %d, v = %d”, u, v); prints : u = 12, v = 21 Dbl(u++) expands to: u++ + u++
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Properties of macros Macros may be nested – in definitions, e.g.: #define Pi 3.1416 #define Twice_Pi 2*Pi – in uses, e.g.: #define double(x) x+x #define Pi 3.1416 … if ( x > double(Pi) ) … Nested macros are expanded recursively 14
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Pitfalls of nested macros 15 Oops!
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What happened? 16 textual replacement!
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Avoiding the problem 17
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What happened 18
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Header Files Have a file extension “.h” Contain shared definitions – typedefs – macros – function prototypes referenced via “#include” directives 19
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Header files: example 20
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typedefs Allow us to define aliases for types Syntax: typedef old_type_name new_type_name; new_type_name becomes an alias for old_type_name Example: – typedef int BasePay; – typedef struct node { int value; struct node *next; } node; 21
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Example 22 defines “wcnode” as an alias for “struct wc” we can use “wcnode” in place of“struct wc” but not here, since “wcnode” has not yet been defined
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What if a file is #included multiple times? 23 foo.h bar1.h bar2.h bar.c
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Example of multiple inclusions 24
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Problems with multiple inclusions 25
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Solution to multiple inclusion problem Use conditional compilation to ensure that a header file is “really included” at most once – header file’s responsibility to protect itself from multiple- inclusion problems – uses a conditional-compilation directive #ifndef – in effect sets a flag when a file is included so we don’t include it again – relies on convention we need to understand it so we don’t break it 26
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Conditional Compilation: #ifdef #ifdef identifier line 1 … line n #endif macros can be defined by the compiler: – gcc –D macroName – gcc –D macroName=definition macros can be defined without giving them a specific value, e.g.: – #define macroName 27 line1 … line n will be included if identifier has been defined as a macro; otherwise nothing will happen.
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Conditional Compilation: #ifndef #ifndef identifier line1 … line n #endif 28 line1 … line n will be included if identifier is NOT defined as a macro; otherwise nothing will happen.
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Solution to multiple inclusion problem The header file is written as follows: #ifndef file_specific_flag #define file_specific_flag …contents of file… #endif file_specific_flag usually constructed from the name of the header file: E.g.: file = foo.h flag = _FOO_H_ – try to avoid macro names starting with ‘_’ 29 indicates whether or not this file has been included already
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Another use of #ifdefs They can be useful for controlling debugging output – Example 1: guard debugging code with #ifdefs: #ifdef DEBUG …debug message… #endif – Example 2: use the debug macro to control what debugging code appears in the program: #ifdef DEBUG #define DMSG(msg) printf(msg) // debugging output #else #define DMSG(msg) {} // empty statement #endif 30 straightforward, but needs discipline to use consistently
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Example 1(a) 31
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Example 1(b) 32 to address the “too many arguments to macro” problem “too many arguments” issue resolved, but the macro expansion isn’t working quite the way we want
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Example 1(c) 33
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Generalizing #ifdef #if constant-expression line 1 … line n #endif line 1 … line n included if constant-expression evaluates to a non-zero value 34 Common uses: #if 1 or #if 0
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