Cancel Macro
The #undef directive in the C programming language is used to undefine a previously declared macro created using the #define directive.
#undef <name_of_macro>
This allows you to remove a macro from the current scope so that its name can be redefined or no longer used in your program.
Macros are global: Macros operate at the preprocessor level, and their scope extends to the entire file where they are defined. Once redefined, the new value will be used wherever that macro appears later in the code.
main.c
1234567891011#include <stdio.h> #define MAX 100 int main() { printf("MAX = %d\n", MAX); // MAX = 100 #undef MAX // remove macros MAX #define MAX 200 // define new macros MAX printf("MAX = %d\n", MAX); // MAX = 200 return 0; }
Tack för dina kommentarer!
single
Fråga AI
Fråga AI
Fråga vad du vill eller prova någon av de föreslagna frågorna för att starta vårt samtal
Sammanfatta detta kapitel
Explain code
Explain why doesn't solve task
Awesome!
Completion rate improved to 5.56
Cancel Macro
Svep för att visa menyn
The #undef directive in the C programming language is used to undefine a previously declared macro created using the #define directive.
#undef <name_of_macro>
This allows you to remove a macro from the current scope so that its name can be redefined or no longer used in your program.
Macros are global: Macros operate at the preprocessor level, and their scope extends to the entire file where they are defined. Once redefined, the new value will be used wherever that macro appears later in the code.
main.c
1234567891011#include <stdio.h> #define MAX 100 int main() { printf("MAX = %d\n", MAX); // MAX = 100 #undef MAX // remove macros MAX #define MAX 200 // define new macros MAX printf("MAX = %d\n", MAX); // MAX = 200 return 0; }
Tack för dina kommentarer!
Awesome!
Completion rate improved to 5.56single