Question

I work in Visual Studio but my project is for a POSIX-based environment (marmalade sdk). In this project, the release build is compiled with gcc for ARM but the debug version works on windows and is compiled by MS compiler. Also this environmet has its own implementation of STL and other standard libraries.

Many of these c++ librares have code like this:

#if defined( _MSC_VER )
   #include <Windows.h>
#else
   #include <pthread.h>
#endif

Is it possible to undefine the _MSC_VER macro? - So that the C++ libraries will detect a POSIX system here.

Was it helpful?

Solution

Of course:

#undef _MSC_VER

#if defined( _MSC_VER )
   #include <Windows.h>
#else
   #include <pthread.h>
#endif

Or, #undef it before you include the file where _MSC_VER is used.

OTHER TIPS

_MSC_VER is (and always should be) defined when compiling with the Microsoft compiler so that it "evaluates to the major and minor number components of the compiler's version number". Therefore, the code is using the wrong macro test, since it will always be defined to some value for your compiler regardless of the Windows environment differences.

Rather than destroy the definition of _MSC_VER (which could lead to other problems if any code really does want to know the compiler version), what you really should do instead is to correct the condition so that a more appropriate macro test is used that distinguishes between the kinds of Windows environments that you might encounter.

See the more complete list of predefined macros you could consider here.

http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/vstudio/b0084kay.aspx

You could either replace the condition ...

#if someOtherConditionGoesHere

... or extend it with additional conditions, e.g.

#if defined(_MSC_VER) && someOtherConditionGoesHere

Licensed under: CC-BY-SA with attribution
Not affiliated with StackOverflow
scroll top