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Type overloading macro

开发者 https://www.devze.com 2023-02-24 05:30 出处:网络
I have a bunch of printf debug helper macros and it would be pret开发者_如何学Pythonty cool to have to not specify the type, is there anything you can do to allow something like macro overloading in c

I have a bunch of printf debug helper macros and it would be pret开发者_如何学Pythonty cool to have to not specify the type, is there anything you can do to allow something like macro overloading in c(can be gcc specific if its available in gcc 4.3). I thought maybe typeof but apparently that doesn't work.

example macro(I also have some ascii terminal color stuff that I can't remember of the top of my head)

#ifdef _DEBUG
#define DPRINT_INT(x) printf("int %s is equal to %i at line %i",#x,x,__LINE__);
.
.
.
#else
#define DPRINT_INT(x)
.
.
.
#endif


Try this; it uses gcc's __builtin methods, and automatically determines the type for you, as best it can, and makes for an easy DEBUG macro where you don't have to specify the type. Of course, you can compare typeof (x) to float, etc. etc.

#define DEBUG(x)                                                 \
  ({                                                             \
    if (__builtin_types_compatible_p (typeof (x), int))          \
        fprintf(stderr,"%d\n",x);                                \
    else if (__builtin_types_compatible_p (typeof (x), char))    \
        fprintf(stderr,"%c\n",x);                                \
    else if (__builtin_types_compatible_p (typeof (x), char[]))  \
        fprintf(stderr,"%s\n",x);                                \
    else                                                         \
        fprintf(stderr,"unknown type\n");                        \

  })


How about the following macro? It still requires you to pick the print format but you won't have to redefine all possible cases and it works on MSVC as well:

#define DPRINT(t,v) printf("The variable '%s' is equal to '%" ## #t ## "' on line %d.\n",#v,v, __LINE__)

To use it:

int var = 5;
const char *str = "test";
DPRINT(i,var);
DPRINT(s,str);


I think you can give a try with following code:

#define DPRINT(fmt) do{ \
            my_printf fmt ; \
        } while(0)

my_printf( const char* szFormat, ... )
{
    char szDbgText[100];

    va_start(args, szFormat);
    vsnprintf(&szDbgText,99,szFormat,args);
    va_end(args);

    fprintf( stderr, "%s", szDbgText );
}
// usage
func( )
{
    int a = 5;
    char *ptr = "hello";

    DPRINT( ("a = %d, ptr = %s\n", a, ptr) );
}

Note: DPRINT usage takes dual parentheses here.

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