CMP0012ΒΆ
if()
recognizes numbers and boolean constants.
In CMake versions 2.6.4 and lower the if()
command implicitly
dereferenced arguments corresponding to variables, even those named
like numbers or boolean constants, except for 0
and 1
. Numbers and
boolean constants such as true
, false
, yes
, no
, on
,
off
, y
, n
, notfound
, ignore
(all case insensitive)
were recognized in some cases but not all. For example, the code if(TRUE)
might have evaluated as false
.
Numbers such as 2 were recognized only in boolean expressions
like if(NOT 2)
(leading to false
) but not as a single-argument like
if(2)
(also leading to false
). Later versions of CMake prefer to
treat numbers and boolean constants literally, so they should not be
used as variable names.
The OLD
behavior for this policy is to implicitly dereference
variables named like numbers and boolean constants. The NEW
behavior
for this policy is to recognize numbers and boolean constants without
dereferencing variables with such names.
This policy was introduced in CMake version 2.8.0.
It may be set by cmake_policy()
or cmake_minimum_required()
.
If it is not set, CMake warns, and uses OLD
behavior.
Note
The OLD
behavior of a policy is
deprecated by definition
and may be removed in a future version of CMake.