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authorRob Landley <rob@landley.net>2015-12-13 16:52:26 -0600
committerRob Landley <rob@landley.net>2015-12-13 16:52:26 -0600
commitf96bb3d8e7ec3882c70b861b998d8573083ffe55 (patch)
treefdf93b80adb5dcbf23ce68202abe5da6ce6c66b7 /scripts/mkstatus.py
parentfc7543b7f63c159d966ca6b71caf17f877eae985 (diff)
downloadtoybox-f96bb3d8e7ec3882c70b861b998d8573083ffe55.tar.gz
Start of TAGGED_ARRAY() infrastructure.
This lets you have struct arrays with a string as the first member, ala: struct {char *name; int x, y} blah thingy[] = TAGGED_ARRAY(BLAH, {"one", 1, 2}, {"two", 3, 4}, {"three", 5, 6} ); And it produces #defines for the array index of each, ala: #define BLAH_one 0 #define BLAH_two 1 #define BLAH_three 2 So you can use thingy[BLAH_two].x and still reorder the elements at will. Note: if you screw up the array initializers, temporarily replace TAGGED_ARRAY(BLAH, with { and the ); with }; and the compiler will give you better error messages. (With the macro the compiler reports errors on the TAGGED_ARRAY line, not where the comma is missing in its contents.) Currently the TAGGED_ARRAY( and ); must be on their own lines, and the { and start of each attached string must be on the same line.
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