I have a variadic function:
LogWrite(FILE * fp, int level, const char * filename, const char * function, ...)
It should be called like this:
LogWrite(fp, int Level, __FILE__, __FUNCTION__, "Message: %s", message)
However, I want to write a variadic macro to make it easier to call:
1: #define LOGWRITE_L1(...) LogWrite(file, 1, __FILE__, __FUNCTION__, ...)
or
2: #define LOGWRITE_L1(file, ...) LogWrite(file, 1, __FILE__, __FUNCTION__, ...)
This is so that a developer can call it using:
LOGWRITE_L1(myfile, "Hello!");
instead of
LogWrite(myfile, 1, __FILE__, __FUNCTION__, "Hello!")
However, both those methods give me a compiler error.
1: expected expression before '...'
2:'file' undeclared (first use in this function)
Is this possible or am I wasting my time? I have never used variadic functions before, so not sure. My function works...I called it using the complete declaration and it wrote to the files that I wanted it to.
You have to put __VA_ARGS__
as the replacement for the variadic arguments:
#define LOGWRITE_L1(file, ...) LogWrite(file, 1, __FILE__, __FUNCTION__, __VA_ARGS__)
This is only part of C99, C11 and C++11 standards. Some compilers offer extensions pertaining to the handling of variadic macros; check your manual.
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