Pay attention carefully because this is a hell of a question ;-)
I want to use template functions for generic collection actions (like search, foreach, etc.) in C while maintaining compiler static type checking. It is fairly straightforward while you're using simple callbacks like in this example:
#define MAKE_FOREACH(TYPE)\
void foreach_##TYPE (TYPE[n] array, int n, void(*f)(TYPE)) {\
for(int i = 0; i < n; i++) {\
f(array[i]);\
}\
}
so you can do things like:
MAKE_FOREACH(int)
MAKE_FOREACH(float)
void intcallback(int x){
printf("got %d\n", x);
}
void floatcallback(float x){
printf("got %f\n", x);
}
int main(){
int[5] iarray = {1,2,3,4,5};
float[5] farray = {1.0,2.0,3.0,4.0,5.0};
foreach_int(iarray, 5, intcallback);
foreach_float(farray, 5, floatcallback);
}
If I'd like to implement callbacks with return types, for example to make a "map" function, I could do:
#define MAKE_MAP(TYPE, RTYPE)\
RTYPE* map_##TYPE (TYPE[n] array, int n, RTYPE(*f)(TYPE)) {\
RTYPE* result = (RTYPE*)malloc(sizeof(RTYPE)*n);\
for(int i = 0; i < n; i++) {\
result[i]=f(array[i]);\
}\
}
So far, so good. The problem comes now, when I want my callback functions to accept any number of typed arguments.
The idea is something like:
#define MAKE_MAP(TYPE, RTYPE, ...)\
RTYPE* map_##TYPE (TYPE[n] array, int n, RTYPE(*f)(TYPE, __VA_ARGS__), __VA_ARGS__)
/*this would work for the declaration (because just the types would be enough)
but the parameter names are missing :-s*/ \
{\
RTYPE* result = (RTYPE*)malloc(sizeof(RTYPE)*n);\
for(int i = 0; i < n; i++) {\
result[i]=f(array[i], /*here the names of the parameters, in order*/);\
}\
}
so, as you can see, I could declare a map function as:
MAKE_MAP(int, float, char)
giving:
float* map_int(int[n] array, int n, float(*f)(int, char), char);
but I cannot figure how to implement the parameter passing with the preprocessor. Here is where I ask for your help, ideas and suggestions.
(By the way, don't tell me to use a variadic function as template and passing a va_list argument to the callback, because all this stuff was because of the type checking :-p)
For information, the source code of GCC 4.6 implements similar tricks for vectors. Look into its file
gcc/vec.h
A recent question raised quite a few shameless preprocessor abusing libraries.
If you are on Linux/BSD Unix, take a look at queue(3) and check into
/usr/include/sys/queue.h
- it's been done before :)