macro¶
Start recording a macro for later invocation as a command:
macro(<name> [arg1 [arg2 [arg3 ...]]])
COMMAND1(ARGS ...)
COMMAND2(ARGS ...)
...
endmacro(<name>)
Define a macro named <name>
that takes arguments named arg1
,
arg2
, arg3
, (…).
Commands listed after macro, but before the matching
endmacro()
, are not invoked until the macro is invoked.
When it is invoked, the commands recorded in the macro are first
modified by replacing formal parameters (${arg1}
) with the arguments
passed, and then invoked as normal commands.
In addition to referencing the formal parameters you can reference the
values ${ARGC}
which will be set to the number of arguments passed
into the function as well as ${ARGV0}
, ${ARGV1}
, ${ARGV2}
,
… which will have the actual values of the arguments passed in.
This facilitates creating macros with optional arguments.
Additionally ${ARGV}
holds the list of all arguments given to the
macro and ${ARGN}
holds the list of arguments past the last expected
argument.
Referencing to ${ARGV#}
arguments beyond ${ARGC}
have undefined
behavior. Checking that ${ARGC}
is greater than #
is the only
way to ensure that ${ARGV#}
was passed to the function as an extra
argument.
See the cmake_policy()
command documentation for the behavior
of policies inside macros.
Macro Argument Caveats¶
Note that the parameters to a macro and values such as ARGN
are
not variables in the usual CMake sense. They are string
replacements much like the C preprocessor would do with a macro.
Therefore you will NOT be able to use commands like:
if(ARGV1) # ARGV1 is not a variable
if(DEFINED ARGV2) # ARGV2 is not a variable
if(ARGC GREATER 2) # ARGC is not a variable
foreach(loop_var IN LISTS ARGN) # ARGN is not a variable
In the first case, you can use if(${ARGV1})
.
In the second and third case, the proper way to check if an optional
variable was passed to the macro is to use if(${ARGC} GREATER 2)
.
In the last case, you can use foreach(loop_var ${ARGN})
but this
will skip empty arguments.
If you need to include them, you can use:
set(list_var "${ARGN}")
foreach(loop_var IN LISTS list_var)
Note that if you have a variable with the same name in the scope from which the macro is called, using unreferenced names will use the existing variable instead of the arguments. For example:
macro(_BAR)
foreach(arg IN LISTS ARGN)
[...]
endforeach()
endmacro()
function(_FOO)
_bar(x y z)
endfunction()
_foo(a b c)
Will loop over a;b;c
and not over x;y;z
as one might be expecting.
If you want true CMake variables and/or better CMake scope control you
should look at the function command.