I've come across the [define] tag, which appears to have basically no meaning. It's used by users both in the context of C's #define
, but also for 'How can I define X in language'.
The tag has no wiki and has been used over a thousand times.
I've come across the [define] tag, which appears to have basically no meaning. It's used by users both in the context of C's #define
, but also for 'How can I define X in language'.
The tag has no wiki and has been used over a thousand times.
The majority of these are actually c-preprocessor questions, but there's unfortunately enough scattered use for other reasons that a manual cleanup is in order.
I've blocked it to stop more from coming in, users trying to apply it will see this message:
Please don't use 'define' as a tag, it is deprecated and will soon be removed. If you're talking about the C preprocessor, use c-preprocessor instead. If you're using it for another reason, please just ensure that you've applied the appropriate language and / or applicable framework tags, and described your problem in detail.
This will also (annoyingly, perhaps) block edits that don't remove the tag, where the simplest fix is .. to remove the tag.
The wide-spectrum use of it kind of prohibits making it a synonym, so yeah, it has to go. Fortunately, the tide is held back while it's being cleaned up :)
Its usage seems vague at best, including giving preference to C
macros.
For example: How do I define x given context y?
. Substitute whatever value you wish for x
and y
, neither x
or y
benefits from a tag called define
.
It can probably just be done away with without incident ...But questions that are specifically about C
macros that don't have a macros tag but do include define should replace define
for macros
. I think the macros tag covers this case.
A macro is a rule or pattern that specifies how a certain input sequence (often a sequence of characters) should be mapped to an output sequence (also often a sequence of characters) according to a defined procedure. The mapping process that instantiates (transforms) a macro into a specific output sequence is known as macro expansion.
However community consensus should be reached before making mass tag edits.
#define
(unlike switch
) is not a statement...