I’m used to this:
class Db {
_Commit(char *file, int line) {
Log("Commit called from %s:%d", file, line);
}
};
#define Commit() _Commit(__FILE__, __LINE__)
but the big problem is that I redefine the word Commit globally, and in a 400k lines application framework it’s a problem. And I don’t want to use a specific word like DbCommit: I dislike redundancies like db->DbCommit(), or to pass the values manually everywhere: db->Commit(__FILE__, __LINE__) is worst.
So, any advice?
So, you’re looking to do logging (or something) with file & line info, and you would rather not use macros, right?
At the end of the day, it simply can’t be done in C++. No matter what mechanism you chose — be that inline functions, templates, default parameters, or something else — if you don’t use a macro, you’ll simply end up with the filename & linenumber of the logging function, rather than the call point.
Use macros. This is one place where they are really not replaceable.
EDIT:
Even the C++ FAQ says that macros are sometimes the lesser of two evils.
EDIT2:
As Nathon says in the comments below, in cases where you do use macros, it’s best to be explicit about it. Give your macros macro-y names, like
COMMIT()rather thanCommit(). This will make it clear to maintainers & debuggers that there’s a macro call going on, and it should help in most cases to avoid collisions. Both good things.