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Home/ Questions/Q 739679
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 14, 20262026-05-14T08:25:42+00:00 2026-05-14T08:25:42+00:00

Possible Duplicates: Why are there sometimes meaningless do/while and if/else statements in C/C++ macros?

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Possible Duplicates:
Why are there sometimes meaningless do/while and if/else statements in C/C++ macros?
do { … } while (0) what is it good for?

I’m working on some C code filled with macros like this:

#define SAFE_FREE(x) do { if ((x) != NULL) {free(x); x=NULL;} } while(0)

Can anyone explain what this macro does, and why do {} while(0) is needed? Wouldn’t that just execute the code once?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-14T08:25:42+00:00Added an answer on May 14, 2026 at 8:25 am
    do { stuff() } while(0);
    

    is doing the exact same thing as stuff(). So what’s the big deal, then? The issue is with the syntax of macros. Suppose we defined the macro like:

    #define SAFE_FREE(x) if ((x) != NULL) { free(x); x=NULL; }
    

    Then, there are two issue. The first is relatively minor: uses of SAFE_FREE no longer require a trailing semi-colon. More importantly, though, code like:

    if (...)
      SAFE_FREE(x)
    else
       stuff();
    

    Will expand to:

    if (...)
      if ((x) != NULL) {
        free(x);
        x = NULL;
      } else
        stuff();
    

    Note, how the else now matches the wrong if statement. This completely alters the program-flow, even though it does not look like that in the source code.

    Defining the macro as above prevents weird behavior as above, since do { ... } while(0) acts just like a statement without its semicolon.

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