The C Preprocessor Versus the Compiler

Submitted by tushar pramanick on Mon, 03/11/2013 - 00:00

The C Preprocessor Versus the Compiler

One important thing you need to remember is that the C preprocessor is not part of the C compiler.

The C preprocessor uses a different syntax. All directives in the C preprocessor begin with a pound sign (#). In other words, the pound sign denotes the beginning of a preprocessor directive, and it must be the first nonspace character on the line.

The C preprocessor is line oriented. Each macro statement ends with a newline character, not a semicolon. (Only C statements end with semicolons.) One of the most common mistakes made by the programmer is to place a semicolon at the end of a macro statement. Fortunately, many C compilers can catch such errors.

The following sections describe some of the most frequently used directives, such as

TIP

    Macro names, especially those that will be substituted with constants, are normally represented with uppercase letters so that they can be distinguished from other variable names in the program.

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Comments
Now let's take a close look at the C program in Listing 2.1.

The first line contains a comment:

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In line 4 of Listing 2.1, you see this function: