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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 16, 20262026-05-16T14:24:17+00:00 2026-05-16T14:24:17+00:00

I have an array ( C language) that should be initialized at compile time.

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I have an array (C language) that should be initialized at compile time.

For example:

DECLARE_CMD(f1, arg);
DECLARE_CMD(f2, arg);

The DECLARE_CMD is called from multiple files.

I want this to be preprocessed in.

my_func_type my_funcs [] = {
   &f1,
   &f2
}

It is possible, with a macro, to append items to an static array?

I am using C99 (with GNU extensions) on gcc4.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-16T14:24:17+00:00Added an answer on May 16, 2026 at 2:24 pm

    NOTE: in your question there are semicolons at the end of every line. This will seriously interfere with any attempt to use these macros. So it depends on where and how the DECLARE_CMD(...) lines are found, and whether you can fix the semicolon problem. If they are simply in a dedicated header file all by themselves, you can do:

    #define DECLARE_CMD(func, arg) &func,
    
    my_func_type my_funcs [] {
        #include "file_with_declare_cmd.h"
    };
    

    …which gets turned into:

    my_func_type my_funcs [] {
        &f1,
        &f2,
    };
    

    Read The New C: X Macros for a good explanation of this.

    If you can’t get rid of the semicolons, this will be processed to:

    my_func_type my_funcs [] {
        &f1,;
        &f2,;
    };
    

    … which is obviously a syntax error, and so this won’t work.

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