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Asked: May 10, 20262026-05-10T20:30:59+00:00 2026-05-10T20:30:59+00:00

I’m using GCC; __FILE__ returns the current source file’s entire path and name: /path/to/file.cpp

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I’m using GCC; __FILE__ returns the current source file’s entire path and name: /path/to/file.cpp. Is there a way to get just the file’s name file.cpp (without its path) at compile time? Is it possible to do this in a portable way? Can template meta programming be applied to strings?

I am using this in an error logging macro. I really do not want my source’s full path making its way into the executable.

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  1. 2026-05-10T20:30:59+00:00Added an answer on May 10, 2026 at 8:30 pm

    If you’re using a make program, you should be able to munge the filename beforehand and pass it as a macro to gcc to be used in your program. For example, in your makefile, change the line:

    file.o: file.c     gcc -c -o file.o src/file.c 

    to:

    file.o: src/file.c     gcc "-DMYFILE=\"`basename $<`\"" -c -o file.o src/file.c 

    This will allow you to use MYFILE in your code instead of __FILE__.

    The use of basename of the source file $< means you can use it in generalized rules such as .c.o. The following code illustrates how it works. First, a makefile:

    mainprog: main.o makefile     gcc -o mainprog main.o  main.o: src/main.c makefile     gcc "-DMYFILE=\"`basename $<`\"" -c -o main.o src/main.c 

    Then a file in a subdirectory, src/main.c:

    #include <stdio.h>  int main (int argc, char *argv[]) {     printf ("file = %s\n", MYFILE);     return 0; } 

    Finally, a transcript showing it running:

    pax:~$ mainprog file = main.c 

    Note the file = line which contains only the base name of the file, not the directory name as well.

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