message pragma

Sends a string literal to the standard output without terminating the compilation.

Syntax

#pragma message( message-string )

Remarks

A typical use of the message pragma is to display informational messages at compile time.

The message-string parameter can be a macro that expands to a string literal, and you can concatenate such macros with string literals in any combination.

If you use a predefined macro in the message pragma, the macro should return a string. Otherwise, you'll have to convert the output of the macro to a string.

The following code fragment uses the message pragma to display messages during compilation:

// pragma_directives_message1.cpp
// compile with: /LD
#if _M_IX86 >= 500
#pragma message("_M_IX86 >= 500")
#endif

#pragma message("")

#pragma message( "Compiling " __FILE__ )
#pragma message( "Last modified on " __TIMESTAMP__ )

#pragma message("")

// with line number
#define STRING2(x) #x
#define STRING(x) STRING2(x)

#pragma message (__FILE__ "(" STRING(__LINE__) "): test")

#pragma message("")

See also

Pragma directives and the __pragma and _Pragma keywords