Imagine I have an X Macro for a list of items defined something like this:
#define X_MACRO(FN)
FN(foo)
FN(bar)
FN(zip)
This works great and I can call it to generate the same code templatized for each element, like:
#define xstr(s) str(s)
#define str(s) #s
#define PRINT_X(E) void print_ ## E () { std::cout << str(E); };
X_MACRO(PRINT_X)
This generates functions like void print_foo() { std::cout << "foo"; };
for each of the X_MACRO elements. So far, so good.
Now, however, I want the list of X Macro elements to be conditional on a pre-processor macro. For example the zip
element should only be included in the X Macro if USE_ZIP
is defined. Of course, I can't put an #ifdef
inside the X Macro, like:
#define X_MACRO(FN)
FN(foo)
FN(bar)
#ifdef USE_ZIP
FN(zip)
#endif
I could instead write the list twice, once with zip
and once without, based on the USE_ZIP
like so:
#ifdef USE_ZIP
#define X_MACRO(FN)
FN(foo)
FN(bar)
FN(zip)
#else
#define X_MACRO(FN)
FN(foo)
FN(bar)
#endif
... but this violates DRY and more importantly it rapidly spirals out of control if you need to conditionally include other elements, which would require a list for each possible combination of USE_*
macros.
How can I do this in a reasonable way?
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