I have discussed throughout the documentation areas of VMD which need to be
considered when using Microsoft's Visual C++ compilers. The VMD library supports
VC++ versions 8 through the latest 14.2. These correspond to Visual Studio
2005 through the current Visual Studio 2019.
I will give here fairly briefly the VC++ quirks which should be taken into
account when using VMD. These quirks exist because the VC++ compiler does not
have a C++ standard conforming preprocessor. More specifically the VC++ compiler
does not follow all of the rules correctly for expanding a macro when a macro
is invoked. Here is a list for things to consider when using VMD with VC++:
-
The BOOST_VMD_IS_EMPTY macro will expand erroneously to 1 if the input
resolves to a function-like macro name, which when it is called with an
empty parameter expands to a tuple.
-
The BOOST_VMD_ASSERT macro, and the corresponding individual VMD ASSERT
macros for the various data types, do not cause an immediate compiler error,
but instead generate invalid C++ if the ASSERT occurs.
-
When the BOOST_VMD_ASSERT macro, or one of the corresponding individual
VMD ASSERT macros for the various data types, does not generate an error,
and the macro in which it is being used does generate some output, it is
necessary to use BOOST_PP_CAT to concatenate the empty result of the VMD
ASSERT macro with the normally generated output to correctly generate the
final expansion of the macro in which the VMD ASSERT occurs.
-
When using BOOST_VMD_EMPTY following some non-empty expansion, or when
using BOOST_VMD_IDENTITY, the value returned needs to be concatenated using
BOOST_PP_CAT with an empty value. You can use BOOST_VMD_IDENTITY_RESULT
to accomplish this transparently.
-
Avoid using an empty parenthesis to pass no data as a tuple or seq if VC++8
might be used as the compiler.