I am using X macros to generate functions setting GPIOs to 0
or 1
(I generate around 60 functions to set around 30 GPIOs). Here is an example (I have just written this example, so the syntax may be wrong):
/* X(pin_name, pin_nb) */
#define CPLD_GPIOs \
X(Pin0, 0) \
X(Pin1, 1) \
X(Pin2, 2) \
X(Pin3, 3)
I generate the functions to access to these GPIOs:
#define X(pin_name, pin_nb) \
static void SetOn_GPIO##pin_name (void) { \
SetOn_GPIOpins(pin_nb);\
}
CPLD_GPIOs
#undef X
The same process exists for SetOff_GPIOXXX
functions.
Is there a way I can access the function generated above by the compiler as SetOn_GPIOPin2
in an other part of the program without directly writing the function name? (In order to keep the code as global as possible)
At the end of preprocessing, we should only have SetOn_GPIOPin2();
(and not every X-macro entries) generated from X-Macro.
Before pre-processing:
void foo ()
{
/* some code */
/*
* Macro to generate the desired function.
* For e.g: SetOn_GPIOPin2();
*/
/* some code */
}
After pre-processing:
void foo ()
{
/* some code */
/* Function resulting of the pre-processing */
SetOn_GPIOPin2();
/* some code */
}