wxWidgets/include/wx/msw/gccpriv.h
Vadim Zeitlin c6c19dc580 Remove extraneous semicolons after wxDECL_FOR_STRICT_MINGW32().
This macro shouldn't be followed by a semicolon because it can be empty, so
remove the extra semicolons to avoid -Wpedantic g++ warnings about it.
2015-07-01 00:39:05 +02:00

169 lines
5.6 KiB
C

/*
Name: wx/msw/gccpriv.h
Purpose: MinGW/Cygwin definitions
Author: Vadim Zeitlin
Modified by:
Created:
Copyright: (c) Vadim Zeitlin
Licence: wxWindows Licence
*/
/* THIS IS A C FILE, DON'T USE C++ FEATURES (IN PARTICULAR COMMENTS) IN IT */
#ifndef _WX_MSW_GCCPRIV_H_
#define _WX_MSW_GCCPRIV_H_
#if defined(__MINGW32__) && !defined(__GNUWIN32__)
#define __GNUWIN32__
#endif
#if defined(__MINGW32__)
/*
Include the header defining __MINGW32_{MAJ,MIN}OR_VERSION but check
that UNICODE or _UNICODE is already defined, as _mingw.h relies on them
being set and we'd get weird compilation errors later if it is included
without them being defined, better give a clearer error right now.
*/
#if !defined(UNICODE)
#ifndef wxUSE_UNICODE
#error "wxUSE_UNICODE must be defined before including this header."
#endif
#if wxUSE_UNICODE
#error "UNICODE must be defined before including this header."
#endif
#endif
#include <_mingw.h>
/*
MinGW-w64 project provides compilers for both Win32 and Win64 but only
defines the same __MINGW32__ symbol for the former as MinGW32 toolchain
which is quite different (notably doesn't provide many SDK headers that
MinGW-w64 does include). So we define a separate symbol which, unlike
the predefined __MINGW64__, can be used to detect this toolchain in
both 32 and 64 bit builds.
And define __MINGW32_TOOLCHAIN__ for consistency and also because it's
convenient as we often want to have some workarounds only for the (old)
MinGW32 but not (newer) MinGW-w64, which still predefines __MINGW32__.
*/
#ifdef __MINGW64_VERSION_MAJOR
#ifndef __MINGW64_TOOLCHAIN__
#define __MINGW64_TOOLCHAIN__
#endif
#else
#ifndef __MINGW32_TOOLCHAIN__
#define __MINGW32_TOOLCHAIN__
#endif
#endif
#define wxCHECK_MINGW32_VERSION( major, minor ) \
( ( ( __MINGW32_MAJOR_VERSION > (major) ) \
|| ( __MINGW32_MAJOR_VERSION == (major) && __MINGW32_MINOR_VERSION >= (minor) ) ) )
#else
#define wxCHECK_MINGW32_VERSION( major, minor ) (0)
#endif
#if defined( __MINGW32__ ) && !defined(__WINE__) && !defined( HAVE_W32API_H )
#if __MINGW32_MAJOR_VERSION >= 1
#define HAVE_W32API_H
#endif
#elif defined( __CYGWIN__ ) && !defined( HAVE_W32API_H )
#if ( __GNUC__ > 2 )
#define HAVE_W32API_H
#endif
#endif
/* check for MinGW/Cygwin w32api version ( releases >= 0.5, only ) */
#if defined( HAVE_W32API_H )
#include <w32api.h>
#endif
#if defined(__W32API_MAJOR_VERSION) && defined(__W32API_MINOR_VERSION)
#define wxCHECK_W32API_VERSION( major, minor ) \
( ( ( __W32API_MAJOR_VERSION > (major) ) \
|| ( __W32API_MAJOR_VERSION == (major) && __W32API_MINOR_VERSION >= (minor) ) ) )
#else
#define wxCHECK_W32API_VERSION( major, minor ) (0)
#endif
/* Cygwin 1.0 */
#if defined(__CYGWIN__) && ((__GNUC__==2) && (__GNUC_MINOR__==9))
#define __CYGWIN10__
#endif
/* Mingw runtime 1.0-20010604 has some missing _tXXXX functions,
so let's define them ourselves: */
#if defined(__GNUWIN32__) && wxCHECK_W32API_VERSION( 1, 0 ) \
&& !wxCHECK_W32API_VERSION( 1, 1 )
#ifndef _tsetlocale
#if wxUSE_UNICODE
#define _tsetlocale _wsetlocale
#else
#define _tsetlocale setlocale
#endif
#endif
#ifndef _tgetenv
#if wxUSE_UNICODE
#define _tgetenv _wgetenv
#else
#define _tgetenv getenv
#endif
#endif
#ifndef _tfopen
#if wxUSE_UNICODE
#define _tfopen _wfopen
#else
#define _tfopen fopen
#endif
#endif
#endif
/* current (= before mingw-runtime 3.3) mingw32 headers forget to
define _puttchar, this will probably be fixed in the next versions but
for now do it ourselves
*/
#if defined( __MINGW32__ ) && \
!wxCHECK_MINGW32_VERSION(3,3) && !defined( _puttchar )
#ifdef wxUSE_UNICODE
#define _puttchar putwchar
#else
#define _puttchar puttchar
#endif
#endif
/*
Traditional MinGW (but not MinGW-w64 nor TDM-GCC) omits many POSIX
functions from their headers when compiled with __STRICT_ANSI__ defined.
Unfortunately this means that they are not available when using -std=c++98
(not very common) or -std=c++11 (much more so), but we still need them even
in this case. As the intention behind using -std=c++11 is probably to get
the new C++11 features and not disable the use of POSIX functions, we just
manually declare the functions we need in this case if necessary.
*/
#if defined(__MINGW32_TOOLCHAIN__) && defined(__STRICT_ANSI__)
#define wxNEEDS_STRICT_ANSI_WORKAROUNDS
/*
This macro is somewhat unusual as it takes the list of parameters
inside parentheses and includes semicolon inside it as putting the
semicolon outside wouldn't do the right thing when this macro is empty.
*/
#define wxDECL_FOR_STRICT_MINGW32(rettype, func, params) \
extern "C" _CRTIMP rettype __cdecl __MINGW_NOTHROW func params ;
/*
There is a bug resulting in a compilation error in MinGW standard
math.h header, see https://sourceforge.net/p/mingw/bugs/2250/, work
around it here because math.h is also included from several other
standard headers (e.g. <algorithm>) and we don't want to duplicate this
hack everywhere this happens.
*/
wxDECL_FOR_STRICT_MINGW32(double, _hypot, (double, double))
#else
#define wxDECL_FOR_STRICT_MINGW32(rettype, func, params)
#endif
#endif
/* _WX_MSW_GCCPRIV_H_ */