Talk:Variadic macro in the C preprocessor
It should be said how the user (= body of the function) accesses to (possibly existing) extra arguments and their number. — MFH: Talk 19:07, 12 May 2005 (UTC)
now you (Akihabara) added "no means is provided...", although I somehow remember some trick to find it out (but I stopped doing tricky things in C about 10 years ago...) - but maybe the tricks I used then are too tricky to be mentioned officially...(kindof calculations with stack pointers, return adresses sneaked from the stack, memory addresses of passed parameters, etc.etc.) - but wasn't there some simple (and official) VA_NUM_ARGS() macro or so? — MFH: Talk 19:14, 13 May 2005 (UTC)
- No. There may be compiler extensions, but there is no way for the macro itself to find out. Note this has nothing to do with stacks; you may be getting confused with variadic functions --Akihabara 22:49, 13 May 2005 (UTC)
The page says "Previous versions of Visual Studio lack this feature", but I'm compiling some variadic macros in VS 2003. --anon
more arguments
What happens if you use dprintf("Hello, world", "another string", foo, i);
? That is: using a variadic macro with a different number of variables. That's what the variadic macros are good for, right? I don't see how this is supposed to work. --Abdull 09:24, 4 December 2007 (UTC)
- The stdarg.h article describes how it works. . --Abdull 09:36, 4 December 2007 (UTC)
fewer arguments
It's worth mentioning the necessity to pass at least one argument to fill the '...' slot, distinct from variadic functions. In the variadic case C99 demands more arguments than identifiers in the definition (see ISO/EOC9899:TC3 6.10.3 constraint 4), but compilers often allow zero extra arguments. Even so, if __VA_ARGS__
is allowed to expand to an empty string then an expression like
#define dprintf(fmt, ...) realdprintf(__FILE__, __LINE__, fmt, __VA_ARGS__)
dprintf("Hello, world");
would expand to
realdprintf("example.c", 123, "Hello, world", );
where a trailing comma is left in the argument list. --212.44.20.129 (talk) 20:01, 11 February 2009 (UTC)