Nous utilisons des cookies pour améliorer votre expérience de navigation. En savoir plus
Accepter
to the top
close form

Remplissez le formulaire ci‑dessous en 2 étapes simples :

Vos coordonnées :

Étape 1
Félicitations ! Voici votre code promo !

Type de licence souhaité :

Étape 2
Team license
Enterprise licence
** En cliquant sur ce bouton, vous déclarez accepter notre politique de confidentialité
close form
Demandez des tarifs
Nouvelle licence
Renouvellement de licence
--Sélectionnez la devise--
USD
EUR
* En cliquant sur ce bouton, vous déclarez accepter notre politique de confidentialité

close form
La licence PVS‑Studio gratuit pour les spécialistes Microsoft MVP
close form
Pour obtenir la licence de votre projet open source, s’il vous plait rempliez ce formulaire
* En cliquant sur ce bouton, vous déclarez accepter notre politique de confidentialité

close form
I am interested to try it on the platforms:
* En cliquant sur ce bouton, vous déclarez accepter notre politique de confidentialité

close form
check circle
Votre message a été envoyé.

Nous vous répondrons à


Si vous n'avez toujours pas reçu de réponse, vérifiez votre dossier
Spam/Junk et cliquez sur le bouton "Not Spam".
De cette façon, vous ne manquerez la réponse de notre équipe.

>
>
>
V1003. Macro expression is dangerous or…
menu mobile close menu
Analyzer diagnostics
General Analysis (C++)
General Analysis (C#)
General Analysis (Java)
Micro-Optimizations (C++)
Diagnosis of 64-bit errors (Viva64, C++)
Customer specific requests (C++)
MISRA errors
AUTOSAR errors
OWASP errors (C#)
Problems related to code analyzer
Additional information
toggle menu Contents

V1003. Macro expression is dangerous or suspicious.

15 Sep 2017

The analyzer has detected a possible error in a macro declaration.

Consider the following example:

#define sqr(x) x * x

This macro should be rewritten in the following way:

#define sqr(x) ((x) * (x))

The original implementation has two flaws that make the macro error-prone. First of all, the macro itself should be enclosed in parentheses; otherwise, the following code would execute incorrectly:

double d = 1.0 / sqr(M_PI);  // 1.0 / M_PI * M_PI == 1.0

For the same reason, the arguments should also be enclosed in parentheses:

sqr(M_PI + 0.42);  // M_PI + 0.42 * M_PI + 0.42

Because the preprocessor handles the code at the lexeme level, it sometimes fails to build a correct syntax tree relying on the macro's text. For example:

#define FOO(A,B) A * B

Depending on the context, this may be both a multiplication of A by B and a declaration of variable B pointing to A. Since a macro declaration provides no information about how the macro will be used, false warnings are possible. In that case, use one of the means described in the documentation to suppress such false positives.

Note. This diagnostic is similar to V733. The latter is more accurate and produces fewer false positives since it deals with an already expanded macro rather than its declaration. On the other hand, V733's diagnostic capabilities are more limited, which makes it unable to recognize many errors.

Other type of found errors can look as follows:

#if A
doA();
#else doB();
#endif

While code refactoring, line break was deleted by accident, and 'doB()' function couldn't be called. At the same time the code stayed compiled.

Fixed variant of code:

#if A
doA();
#else
doB();
#endif

You can look at examples of errors detected by the V1003 diagnostic.