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Let’s proceed on the interaction between active characters and macros with this small macro, which just returns its first argument:
define([car], [$1])
The two pairs of quotes above are not part of the arguments of
define
; rather, they are understood by the top level when it
tries to find the arguments of define
. Therefore, assuming
car
is not already defined, it is equivalent to write:
define(car, $1)
But, while it is acceptable for a configure.ac to avoid unnecessary quotes, it is bad practice for Autoconf macros which must both be more robust and also advocate perfect style.
At the top level, there are only two possibilities: either you quote or you don’t:
car(foo, bar, baz) ⇒foo [car(foo, bar, baz)] ⇒car(foo, bar, baz)
Let’s pay attention to the special characters:
car(#) error→EOF in argument list
The closing parenthesis is hidden in the comment; with a hypothetical quoting, the top level understood it this way:
car([#)]
Proper quotation, of course, fixes the problem:
car([#]) ⇒#
Here are more examples:
car(foo, bar) ⇒foo car([foo, bar]) ⇒foo, bar car((foo, bar)) ⇒(foo, bar) car([(foo], [bar)]) ⇒(foo define([a], [b]) ⇒ car(a) ⇒b car([a]) ⇒b car([[a]]) ⇒a car([[[a]]]) ⇒[a]