Local Iteration
Local iteration is a simple vertical repetition construct.
It expands a macro with each number in a user-specified range.
Each expansion is on a separate line.
Tutorial
This mechanism requires two pieces of information to operate:
a range to iterate over and a macro to expand on each iteration.
This information is obtained by the mechanism through two named external arguments.
These arguments are specified as user-defined macros named BOOST_PP_LOCAL_LIMITS and BOOST_PP_LOCAL_MACRO.
BOOST_PP_LOCAL_LIMITS specifies a range of values to iterate over.
It must expand to a tuple containing two elements--a lower and upper bound.
Both the upper and lower bounds must be numeric values in the range of 0 to BOOST_PP_LIMIT_ITERATION.
For example, if the user wishes a macro to be expanded with numbers ranging from 0 to 10,
BOOST_PP_LOCAL_LIMITS would be defined like this:
#define BOOST_PP_LOCAL_LIMITS (0, 10)
Note that there is whitespace after the name of the macro.
The macro does not take two arguments.
In the case above, if there was no whitespace, a preprocessing error would occur because 0 and 10 are invalid identifiers.
Both the upper and lower bounds specified in the BOOST_PP_LOCAL_LIMITS macro are evaluated parameters.
This implies that they can include simple arithmetic or logical expressions.
For instance, the above definition could easily have been written like this:
#define N() 5
#define BOOST_PP_LOCAL_LIMITS (0, N() + 5)
Because of this, if the whitespace after the macro name is elided, it is possible for the definition to be syntactically valid:
#define A 0
#define B 10
#define BOOST_PP_LOCAL_LIMITS(A, B)
// note: no whitespace ^
If this happens, an error will occur inside the mechanism when it attempts to use this macro.
The error messages that result may be obscure, so always remember to include the whitespace.
A correct version of the above looks like this:
#define A 0
#define B 10
#define BOOST_PP_LOCAL_LIMITS (A, B)
// note: has whitespace ^
BOOST_PP_LOCAL_MACRO is the macro that is expanded by the mechanism.
This macro is expanded on each iteration with the current number of the iteration.
It must defined as a unary macro or result in a macro that can be called with one argument:
#define BOOST_PP_LOCAL_MACRO(n) \
template<> struct sample<n> { }; \
/**/
...or...
#define SAMPLE(n) \
template<> struct sample<n> { }; \
/**/
#define BOOST_PP_LOCAL_MACRO SAMPLE
Once these two macros are defined, the local iteration is initiated by including BOOST_PP_LOCAL_ITERATE().
??=include BOOST_PP_LOCAL_ITERATE()
(The ??=
token is a trigraph for #
.
I use the trigraph to make it clear that I am including a file rather than defining or expanding a macro, but it is not necessary.
Even the digraph version, %:
, could be used.
Some compilers do not readily accept trigraphs and digraphs, so keep that in mind.
Other than that, use whichever one you prefer.)
In order to repeat the sample
specialization, the pieces must be put together....
#define BOOST_PP_LOCAL_MACRO(n) \
template<> struct sample<n> { }; \
/**/
#define BOOST_PP_LOCAL_LIMITS (0, 10)
??=include BOOST_PP_LOCAL_ITERATE()
This will result in a specialization of sample
for each number in the range of 0 to 10.
The output will look something like this:
template<> struct sample<0> { };
template<> struct sample<1> { };
template<> struct sample<2> { };
// ...
template<> struct sample<10> { };
After the local-iteration is complete, both BOOST_PP_LOCAL_LIMITS and BOOST_PP_LOCAL_MACRO are automatically undefined.
If the values need to be retained for a future local-iteration, they must be defined indirectly:
#define LIMITS (0, 10)
#define SAMPLE(n) \
template<> struct sample<n> { }; \
/**/
#define BOOST_PP_LOCAL_LIMITS LIMITS
#define BOOST_PP_LOCAL_MACRO(n) SAMPLE(n)
??=include BOOST_PP_LOCAL_ITERATE()
See Also
- Paul Mensonides