drizzle drizzle wrote:
Any developer sense on what it might take to extend the gcc
preprocessor to do these ? I have some experience with gcc front end.
I am especially keen abt multiline macros, so that the lines can be on
separate lines. Any neat trick that can accomplish this by using
#define
drizzle drizzle wrote:
Any developer sense on what it might take to extend the gcc
preprocessor to do these ? I have some experience with gcc front end.
I am especially keen abt multiline macros, so that the lines can be on
separate lines. Any neat trick that can accomplish this by using
#define
Any developer sense on what it might take to extend the gcc
preprocessor to do these ? I have some experience with gcc front end.
I am especially keen abt multiline macros, so that the lines can be on
separate lines. Any neat trick that can accomplish this by using
#define ?
dz
On 4/20/07, Joe B
On Fri, Apr 20, 2007 at 01:27:48PM -0400, drizzle drizzle wrote:
> Ok can you tell me what directives does it provide to do what I
> have said . And I am not a beginner to gcc.
The answer is that gcc provides what the C standard specifies and nothing
more. You appear to want a more complica
On 20 April 2007 18:28, drizzle drizzle wrote:
> Ok can you tell me what directives does it provide to do what I
> have said . And I am not a beginner to gcc.
Then you should have RTFMd by now.
cheers,
DaveK
--
Can't think of a witty .sigline today
Ok can you tell me what directives does it provide to do what I
have said . And I am not a beginner to gcc.
1. Repeating a block a certain number of times
for example
repeat expr
foo()
end
Then you can call expr 5 to have foo called 5 times.
2. Multiline macros with new lines
On Wed, Apr 18, 2007 at 09:07:07PM -0400, drizzle drizzle wrote:
> Can some one tell me if gcc preprocessor can support in some way
> the following
> features
You are asking a beginner C programming question. gcc's preprocessor
does what standard C preprocessors do.