The simplest way of defining my problem is that I'm trying to implement a mechanism that would check whether the same string had already been used (or a pair (number, string)). I would like this mechanism to be implemented in a smart way using C preprocessor. I would also like that this mechanism gave me compile errors when there is a conflict or run-time errors in Debug mode (by checking assertions). We don't want the developer to make a mistake when adding a message, as every message should be unique. I know that it could be done by calculating a hash or for example crc/md5 but this mechanism would be conflict-vulnerable which I need to avoid. It is crucial that every message can be used only once.
Example behaviour of this mechanism:
addMessage(1, "Message1") //OK
addMessage(2, "Message2") //OK
.
.
.
addMessage(N, "MessageN") //OK
addMessage(2, "Message2") //Compile error, Message2 has already been used
Alternative behaviour (when Debugging code):
addMessage(1, "Message1") //OK
addMessage(2, "Message2") //OK
.
.
.
addMessage(N, "MessageN") //OK
addMessage(2, "Message2") //Assertion failed, because Message2 has already been used
The preferred way of doing it would be smart usage of #define and #undef directives. In general the preprocessor should be used in a smart way (I am not sure if this is possible) maybe it can be achieved by appropriate combinations of macros? Any C preprocessor hacker that could help me solve this problem?
//EDIT: I need those messages to be unique globally, not only inside one code block (like function of if-statement).
//EDIT2: The best description of the problem would be that I have 100 different source files and I would like to check with a preprocessor (or possibly other mechanism other than parsing source files with a script at a start of the compilation every-time, which would be very time-consuming and would add another stage to an enough complicated project) if a string (or a preprocessor definition) was used more than one time. I still have no idea how to do it (I know it may not be possible at all but I hope it actually is).