[/ (C) Copyright Edward Diener 2011-2015 Distributed under the Boost Software License, Version 1.0. (See accompanying file LICENSE_1_0.txt or copy at http://www.boost.org/LICENSE_1_0.txt). ] [section:vmd_test_empty Emptiness] [heading Passing empty arguments] It is possible to pass an empty argument to a macro. The official terminology for this in the C++ standard is an argument "consisting of no preprocessing tokens". Let us consider a number of cases without worrying too much what the macro output represents. Consider these two function-like macros: #define SMACRO() someoutput #define EMACRO(x) otheroutput x The first macro takes no parameters so invoking it must always be done by SMACRO() and passing any arguments to it would be invalid. The second macro takes a single parameter. it can be evoked as EMACRO(somedata) but it also can be invoked as EMACRO() In the second invocation of EMACRO we are passing an empty argument to the macro. Similarly for any macro having 1 or more parameters, an empty argument can be validly passed for any of the parameters, as in #define MMACRO(x,y,z) x y z MMACRO(1,,2) An empty argument is an argument even if we are passing nothing. Because an empty argument can be passed for a given parameter of a macro does not mean one should do so. Any given macro will specify what each argument to a macro should represent, and it is has normally been very rare to encounter a macro which specifies that an empty argument can logically be passed for a given argument. But from the perspective of standard C++ it is perfectly valid to pass an empty argument for a macro parameter. The notion of passing empty arguments can be extended to passing empty data which "consists of no preprocessing tokens" in slightly more complicated situations. It is possible to pass empty data as an argument to a variadic macro in the form of variadic macro data, as in #define VMACRO(x,...) x __VA_ARGS__ invoked as VMACRO(somedata,) Here one passes empty data as the variadic macro data and it is perfectly valid C++. Please notice that this different from VMACRO(somedata) which is not valid C++, prior to C++20, since something must be passed for the variadic argument. In C++20 the above invocation is valid and is exactly the same as in our previous example of 'VMACRO(somedata,)' where one passes empty data as the variadic macro data. Similarly one could invoke the macro as VMACRO(somedata,vdata1,,vdata3) where one is passing variadic macro data but an element in the variadic macro data is empty. Furthermore if we are invoking a macro which expects a Boost PP data type, such as a tuple, we could also validly pass empty data for all or part of the data in a tuple, as in #define TMACRO(x,atuple) x atuple TMACRO(somedata,()) In this case we are passing a 1 element tuple where the single element itself is empty. or TMACRO(somedata,(telem1,,telem2,teleem3)) In this case we are passing a 4 element tuple where the second element is empty. Again either invocation is valid C++ but it is not necessarily what the designed of the macro has desired, even if in both cases the macro designer has specified that the second parameter must be a tuple for the macro to work properly. [heading Returning emptiness] Similar to passing empty arguments in various ways to a macro, the data which a macro returns ( or 'generates' may be a better term ) could be empty, in various ways. Again I am not necessarily promoting this idea as a common occurrence of macro design but merely pointing it out as valid C++ preprocessing. #define RMACRO(x,y,z) RMACRO(data1,data2,data3) It is perfectly valid C++ to return "nothing" from a macro invocation. In fact a number of macros in Boost PP do that based on the preprocessor metaprogramming logic of the macro, and are documented as such. Similarly one could return nothing as part or all of a Boost PP data type or even as part of variadic macro data. #define TRETMACRO(x,y,z) () #define TRETMACRO1(x,y,z) (x,,y,,z) #define VRETMACRO(x,y,z) x,,y,,z Here again we are returning something but in terms of a Boost PP tuple or in terms of variadic data, we have elements which are empty. [heading Emptiness in preprocessor metaprogramming] In the examples given above where "emptiness" in one form of another is passed as arguments to a macro or returned from a macro, the examples I have given were created as simplified as possible to illustrate my points. In actual preprocessor metaprogramming, using Boost PP, where complicated logic is used to generate macro output based on the arguments to a macro, it might be useful to allow and work with empty data if one were able to test for the fact that data was indeed empty. [heading Testing for empty data] Currently Boost PP has an undocumented macro for testing whether a parameter is empty of not, written without the use of variadic macros. The macro is called BOOST_PP_IS_EMPTY. The macro is by its nature flawed, since there is no generalized way of determining whether or not a parameter is empty using the C++ preprocessor prior to C++20. But the macro will work given input limited in various ways or if the input is actually empty. Paul Mensonides, the developer of Boost PP and the BOOST_PP_IS_EMPTY macro in that library, also wrote a better macro using variadic macros, for determining whether or not a parameter is empty or not, which he published on the Internet in response to a discussion about emptiness. This macro is also not perfect, since there is no perfect solution prior to C++20, but will work correctly with almost all input. I have adapted his code for VMD and developed my own very slightly different code. The macro is called [macroref BOOST_VMD_IS_EMPTY] and will return 1 if its input is empty or 0 if its input is not empty. The macro is a variadic macro which make take any input [footnote For VC++ 8 the input is not variadic data but a single parameter]. [heading Macro Flaw with a standard C++ compiler] The one situation prior to C++20 where the macro does not work properly is if its input resolves to a function-like macro name or a sequence of preprocessor tokens ending with a function-like macro name and the function-like macro takes two or more parameters. Here is a simple example: #include #define FMACRO(x,y) any_output BOOST_VMD_IS_EMPTY(FMACRO) BOOST_VMD_IS_EMPTY(some_input FMACRO) In the first case the name of a function-like macro is being passed to BOOST_VMD_IS_EMPTY while in the second case a sequence of preprocessing tokens is being passed to BOOST_VMD_IS_EMPTY ending with the name of a function-like macro. The function-like macro also has two ( or more ) parameters. In both the cases above a compiler error will result from the use of BOOST_VMD_IS_EMPTY. Please note that these two problematical cases are not the same as passing an invocation of a function-like macro name to BOOST_VMD_IS_EMPTY, as in #include BOOST_VMD_IS_EMPTY(FMACRO(arg1,arg2)) BOOST_VMD_IS_EMPTY(someinput FMACRO(arg1,arg2)) which always works correctly, unless of course a particular function-like macro invocation resolves to either of our two previous situations. Another situation where the macro may not work properly is if the previously mentioned function-like macro takes a single parameter but creates an error when the argument passed is empty. An example of this would be: #define FMACRO(x) BOOST_PP_CAT(+,x C); When nothing is passed to FMACRO undefined behavior will occur since attempting to concatenate '+' to ' C' is UB in C++ preprocessor terms. So for a standard conforming compiler, prior to C++20, we have essentially two corner cases where the BOOST_VMD_IS_EMPTY does not work and, when it does not work it, produces a compiler error rather than an incorrect result. Essentially what is desired for maximum safety is that we never pass input ending with the name of a function-like macro name when testing for emptiness. [heading Macro Flaw with Visual C++] The VC++ preprocessor is not a standard C++ conforming preprocessor in at least two relevant situations to our discussion of emptiness. These situations combine to create a single corner case which causes the BOOST_VMD_IS_EMPTY macro to not work properly using VC++ when the input resolves to a function-like macro name. The first situation, related to our discussion of emptiness, where the VC++ preprocessor is not a standard C++ conforming preprocessor is that if a macro taking 'n' number of parameters is invoked with 0 to 'n-1' parameters, the compiler does not give an error, but only a warning. #define FMACRO(x,y) x + y FMACRO(1) should give a compiler error, as it does when using a C++ standard-conforming compiler, but when invoked using VC++ it only gives a warning and VC++ continues macro substitution with 'y' as a placemarker preprocessing token. This non-standard conforming action actually eliminates the case where BOOST_VMD_IS_EMPTY does not work properly with a standard C++ conforming compiler. But of course it has the potential of producing incorrect output in other macro processing situations unrelated to the BOOST_VMD_IS_EMPTY invocation, where a compiler error should occur. A second general situation, related to our discussion of emptiness, where the VC++ preprocessor is not a standard C++ conforming preprocessor is that the expansion of a macro works incorrectly when the expanded macro is a function-like macro name followed by a function-like macro invocation, in which case the macro re-expansion is erroneously done more than once. This latter case can be seen by this example: #define FMACRO1(parameter) FMACRO3 parameter() #define FMACRO2() () #define FMACRO3() 1 FMACRO1(FMACRO2) should expand to: FMACRO3() but in VC++ it expands to: 1 where after initially expanding the macro to: FMACRO3 FMACRO2() VC++ erroneously rescans the sequence of preprocessing tokens more than once rather than rescan just one more time for more macro names. What these two particular preprocessor flaws in the VC++ compiler mean is that although BOOST_VMD_IS_EMPTY does not fail with a compiler error in the same case as with a standard C++ conforming compiler given previously, it fails by giving the wrong result in another situation. The failing situation is: when the input to BOOST_VMD_IS_EMPTY resolves to only a function-like macro name, and the function-like macro, when passed a single empty argument, expands to a Boost PP tuple, BOOST_VMD_IS_EMPTY will erroneously return 1 when using the Visual C++ compiler rather than either give a preprocessing error or return 0. Here is an example of the failure: #include #define FMACRO4() ( any_number_of_tuple_elements ) #define FMACRO5(param) ( any_number_of_tuple_elements ) #define FMACRO6(param1,param2) ( any_number_of_tuple_elements ) BOOST_VMD_IS_EMPTY(FMACRO4) // erroneously returns 1, instead of 0 BOOST_VMD_IS_EMPTY(FMACRO5) // erroneously returns 1, instead of 0 BOOST_VMD_IS_EMPTY(FMACRO6) // erroneously returns 1, instead of generating a preprocessing error As with a standard C++ conforming compiler prior to C++20, we have a rare corner case where the BOOST_VMD_IS_EMPTY will not work properly, but unfortunately in this very similar but even rarer corner case with VC++, we will silently get an incorrect result rather than a compiler error. I want to reiterate that for all compilers prior to C++20 there is no perfect solution in C++ to the detection of emptiness even for a C++ compiler whose preprocessor is completely conformant, which VC++ obviously is not. [heading Testing emptiness in C++20 mode] A few compilers can currently operate in C++20 mode, by which I mean that you can pass a compiler flag when compiling with such a compiler which enforces the upcoming C++20 standard. One of the features of the C++20 standard is the addition of a preprocessor construct called __VA_OPT__. Because of the specification of how the __VA_OPT__ construct works in C++20, it is now possible to have the BOOST_VMD_IS_EMPTY macro work perfectly to test for emptiness without any of the flaws that exist in the macro for levels of the C++ standard before C++20. But the macro will only do a 100% reliable test for emptiness when the compiler is compiling in C++20 mode. For all levels of the C++ standard before C++20, such as C++98, C++03, C++11, C++14, and C++17, the testing for emptiness has the corner cases which prevent it from wroking perfectly which have already been discussed. Furthermore in C++20 mode it is possible that a compiler still does not yet support the __VA_OPT__ construct, even though it is part of the C++20 standard. Luckily it is possible to test whether or not a compiler supports the __VA_OPT__ construct in C++20 mode, and the macro implementation of BOOST_VMD_IS_EMPTY does that before using the construct to provide a perfectly reliable implementation for testing emptiness. The result of all this is that when a compiler is compiling source using the C++20 standard, and supports the C++20 __VA_OPT__ preprocessor construct, the implementation provides a completely reliable way of testing for emptiness using the BOOST_VMD_IS_EMPTY macro. Otherwise the BOOST_VMD_IS_EMPTY macro has the corner cases previously discussed which make the macro less than 100% reliable in testing for emptiness. The good news of course is that more compilers will be implementaing the C++20 standard and more C++ programmers will be using the C++20 standard to compile their code. The programmer may know whether the compiler is being used in C++20 mode from the command line parameters he passes to the compiler, and the programmer may know whether the compiler in C++20 mode supports the __VA_OPT__ construct of C++20 from the compiler's documentation. But from the preprocessor programming perspective it would be good to find out using a macro whether or not C++20 mode with the __VA_OPT__ construct is being used so that the BOOST_VMD_IS_EMPTY macro can be considered completely reliable in testing for emptiness. Such a macro does already exist in the Boost Preprocessor library, and it is called BOOST_PP_VARIADIC_HAS_OPT. You can read the documentation for this macro in the Boost Preprocessor library documentation, but I will give a quick rundown of how this works here. The macro is a function-like macro taking no parameters and returns 1 if the compiler is in C++20 mode and __VA_OPT__ is supported, otherwise returns 0. The header file needed to invoke the macro as BOOST_PP_VARIADIC_HAS_OPT() is included as: #include The programmer does not have to be compiling in C++20 mode to invoke the BOOST_PP_VARIADIC_HAS_OPT macro. When the programmer is not in C++20 mode invoking the macro always returns 0. When the programmer is in C++20 mode invoking the macro returns 1 when the __VA_OPT__ construct is supported and returns 0 when the __VA_OPT__ construct is not supported. It does this latter step through clever preprocessor programming. [heading Macro Flaw conclusion] With all of the above mentioned, the cases where BOOST_VMD_IS_EMPTY will work incorrectly are very small, even with the erroneous VC++ preprocessor, and I consider the macro worthwhile to use since it works correctly with the vast majority of possible preprocessor input, and always works correctly in C++20 mode with __VA_OPT__ preprocessor support. The case where it will not work, with both a C++ standard conforming preprocessor or with Visual C++, occurs when the name of a function-like macro is part of the input to BOOST_VMD_IS_EMPTY. Obviously the macro should be used by the preprocessor metaprogrammer when the possible input to it is constrained to eliminate the erroneous case. Furthermore, since emptiness can correctly be tested for in nearly every situation, the BOOST_VMD_IS_EMPTY macro can be used internally when the preprocessor metaprogrammer wants to return data from a macro and all or part of that data could be empty. Therefore I believe the BOOST_VMD_IS_EMPTY macro is quite useful, despite the corner case flaws which makes it imperfect. Consequently I believe that the preprocessor metaprogrammer can use the concept of empty preprocessor data in the design of his own macros. [heading Using the macro] The macro BOOST_VMD_IS_EMPTY is used internally throughout VMD and macro programmers may find this macro useful in their own programming efforts despite the slight flaw in the way that it works in pre C++20 mode. You can use the general header file: #include or you can use the individual header file: #include for the BOOST_VMD_IS_EMPTY macro. [endsect]