I'm trying to use the if
function (as opposed to one of the conditional statements) in GNU make
in order to add a word to a list if a specific variable isn't defined. The way I've ended up doing this is to leave the second argument blank while providing the third argument, like so:
FOO := baz $(if $(BAR),,quux)
This sees to work OK, but strike开发者_运维问答s me as a little silly. Is there any sort of simple, built-in way to do what I want? I could define my own not
function, but
FOO := baz $(if $(call not,$BAR),quux)
isn't much of an improvement in my opinion.
I would go this way:
ifndef BAR
FOO +=quux
endif
or if empty string has meaning "not defined", then:
ifeq ($(BAR),)
FOO +=quux
endif
According to the docs:
The first argument, condition, first has all preceding and trailing whitespace stripped, then is expanded. If it expands to any non-empty string, then the condition is considered to be true. If it expands to an empty string, the condition is considered to be false.
So the question is how would you make a defined variable give an empty string and a non-defined variable give a non-empty string.
You could do this for example using the filter
function combined with the origin
function ($(if $(filter undefined,$(origin BAR)),quux)
), but that's even uglier than the two examples you provide ^_^
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