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This is how CPP behaves in all the cases which the C standard describes as implementation-defined. This term means that the implementation is free to do what it likes, but must document its choice and stick to it.
Currently, CPP requires its input to be ASCII or UTF-8. The execution character set may be controlled by the user, with the -fexec-charset and -fwide-exec-charset options.
The C and C++ standards allow identifiers to be composed of `_' and the alphanumeric characters. C++ and C99 also allow universal character names, and C99 further permits implementation-defined characters. GCC currently only permits universal character names if -fextended-identifiers is used, because the implementation of universal character names in identifiers is experimental.
GCC allows the `$' character in identifiers as an extension for most targets. This is true regardless of the std= switch, since this extension cannot conflict with standards-conforming programs. When preprocessing assembler, however, dollars are not identifier characters by default.
Currently the targets that by default do not permit `$' are AVR, IP2K, MMIX, MIPS Irix 3, ARM aout, and PowerPC targets for the AIX and BeOS operating systems.
You can override the default with -fdollars-in-identifiers or fno-dollars-in-identifiers. See fdollars-in-identifiers.
In textual output, each whitespace sequence is collapsed to a single space. For aesthetic reasons, the first token on each non-directive line of output is preceded with sufficient spaces that it appears in the same column as it did in the original source file.
The preprocessor and compiler interpret character constants in the same way; i.e. escape sequences such as `\a' are given the values they would have on the target machine.
The compiler values a multi-character character constant a character
at a time, shifting the previous value left by the number of bits per
target character, and then or-ing in the bit-pattern of the new
character truncated to the width of a target character. The final
bit-pattern is given type int
, and is therefore signed,
regardless of whether single characters are signed or not (a slight
change from versions 3.1 and earlier of GCC). If there are more
characters in the constant than would fit in the target int
the
compiler issues a warning, and the excess leading characters are
ignored.
For example, 'ab'
for a target with an 8-bit char
would be
interpreted as `(int) ((unsigned char) 'a' * 256 + (unsigned char) 'b')', and '\234a'
as `(int) ((unsigned char) '\234' * 256 + (unsigned char) 'a')'.
For a discussion on how the preprocessor locates header files, Include Operation.
See Computed Includes.
No macro expansion occurs on any `#pragma' directive line, so the question does not arise.
Note that GCC does not yet implement any of the standard pragmas.