DoWhile0--华硕笔试题

华硕2012校招碰到的一道题,之前在实验室讨论过,关于Linux内核里很多的宏定义都是用do{}while(0)写的,讨论没那么深入,刚好http://kernelnewbies.org/FAQ/DoWhile0这里有个总结,转过来。

Why do a lot of #defines in the kernel use do { ... } while(0)?

There are a couple of reasons:

  • (from Dave Miller) Empty statements give a warning from the compiler so this is why you see #define FOO do { } while(0).

    空的宏定义,编译器会给warning。

  • (from Dave Miller) It gives you a basic block in which to declare local variables.

    代码块,可以声明局部变量。

  • (from Ben Collins) It allows you to use more complex macros in conditional code. 

    在有条件判断的地方可以应用稍微复杂点的宏定义。

    Imagine a macro of several lines of code like:

    #define FOO(x) \
            printf("arg is %s\n", x); \
            do_something_useful(x);
    

    Now imagine using it like:

    if (blah == 2)
            FOO(blah);
    

    This interprets to:

    if (blah == 2)
            printf("arg is %s\n", blah);
            do_something_useful(blah);;
    

    As you can see, the if then only encompasses the printf(), and the do_something_useful() call is unconditional (not within the scope of the if), like you wanted it. So, by using a block like do { ... } while(0), you would get this:

    if (blah == 2)
            do {
                    printf("arg is %s\n", blah);
                    do_something_useful(blah);
            } while (0);
    

    Which is exactly what you want.

  • (from Per Persson)  多个语句时候 分号 也可能引发错误

    As both Miller and Collins point out, you want a block statement so you can have several lines of code and declare local variables. But then the natural thing would be to just use for example:

    #define exch(x,y) { int tmp; tmp=x; x=y; y=tmp; }
    

    However that wouldn't work in some cases. The following code is meant to be an if-statement with two branches:

    if (x > y)
            exch(x,y);          // Branch 1
    else  
            do_something();     // Branch 2
    

    But it would be interpreted as an if-statement with only one branch:

    if (x > y) {                // Single-branch if-statement!!!
            int tmp;            // The one and only branch consists
            tmp = x;            // of the block.
            x = y;
            y = tmp;
    }
    ;                           // empty statement
    else                        // ERROR!!! "parse error before else"
            do_something();
    

    The problem is the semi-colon (;) coming directly after the block. The solution for this is to sandwich the block between do and while (0). Then we have a single statement with the capabilities of a block, but not considered as being a block statement by the compiler. Our if-statement now becomes:

    if (x > y)
            do {
                    int tmp;
                    tmp = x;
                    x = y;
                    y = tmp;
            } while(0);
    else
            do_something();
    
  • (from Bart Trojanowski) gcc adds Statement-Expressions which provide an alternative to the do-while-0 block. They provide the above mentioned benefits and are slightly more legible.

    #define FOO(arg) ({         \
               typeof(arg) lcl; \
               lcl = bar(arg);  \
               lcl;             \
        })
    


评论
添加红包

请填写红包祝福语或标题

红包个数最小为10个

红包金额最低5元

当前余额3.43前往充值 >
需支付:10.00
成就一亿技术人!
领取后你会自动成为博主和红包主的粉丝 规则
hope_wisdom
发出的红包
实付
使用余额支付
点击重新获取
扫码支付
钱包余额 0

抵扣说明:

1.余额是钱包充值的虚拟货币,按照1:1的比例进行支付金额的抵扣。
2.余额无法直接购买下载,可以购买VIP、付费专栏及课程。

余额充值