__stdcall Home
This page is specific to:.NET Framework Version:1.12.03.03.54.0
C++ Language Reference
__stdcall

Microsoft Specific

The __stdcall calling convention is used to call Win32 API functions. The callee cleans the stack, so the compiler makes vararg functions __cdecl. Functions that use this calling convention require a function prototype.

return-type __stdcall function-name[(argument-list)]

The following list shows the implementation of this calling convention.

Element Implementation
Argument-passing order Right to left.
Argument-passing convention By value, unless a pointer or reference type is passed.
Stack-maintenance responsibility Called function pops its own arguments from the stack.
Name-decoration convention An underscore (_) is prefixed to the name. The name is followed by the at sign (@) followed by the number of bytes (in decimal) in the argument list. Therefore, the function declared as int func( int a, double b ) is decorated as follows: _func@12
Case-translation convention None

The /Gz compiler option specifies __stdcall for all functions not explicitly declared with a different calling convention.

Functions declared using the __stdcall modifier return values the same way as functions declared using __cdecl.

Example

In the following example, use of __stdcall results in all WINAPI function types being handled as a standard call:

// Example of the __stdcall keyword
#define WINAPI __stdcall
// Example of the __stdcall keyword on function pointer
typedef BOOL (__stdcall *funcname_ptr)(void * arg1, const char * arg2, DWORD flags, ...);

END Microsoft Specific

See Also

Argument Passing and Naming Conventions | C++ Keywords

© 2009 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.   Terms of Use | Trademarks | Privacy Statement
Page view tracker
Rate the Lightweight library
x
Lightweight builds on ScriptFree (loband) by adding features you've requested: a SearchBox and default code language selection.
Do you like the SearchBox?
Do you like the tabbed code blocks?
How useful is this topic?
Tell us more.
Thanks
x
You're helping to improve MSDN Online.
Feedback
Switch View
Classic
Lightweight Beta
ScriptFree
Switch View