I’m reading the phoneME’s source code. It’s a FOSS JavaME implementation. It’s written in C++, and I stumbled upon this:
// Makes a string of the argument (which is not macro-expanded)
#define STR(a) #a
I know C and C++, but I never read something like this. What does the # in #a do?
Also, in the same file, there’s:
// Makes a string of the macro expansion of a
#define XSTR(a) STR(a)
I mean, what’s the use of defining a new macro, if all it does is calling an existing macro?
The source code is in https://phoneme.dev.java.net/source/browse/phoneme/releases/phoneme_feature-mr2-rel-b23/cldc/src/vm/share/utilities/GlobalDefinitions.hpp?rev=5525&view=markup. You can find it with a CTRL+F.
In the first definition,
#ameans to print the macro argument as a string. This will turn, e.g.STR(foo)into"foo", but it won’t do macro-expansion on its arguments.The second definition doesn’t add anything to the first, but by passing its argument to another macro, it forces full macro expansion of its argument. So
XSTR(expr)creates a string ofexprwith all macros fully expanded.