-
```
When using a C macro with stringized variables, all the code after the # will
appear greyed-out as a preprocessor directive:
#define MIN(a, b) (a < b ? a
: b)
#define LARGEST_INT_TYPE unsign…
-
```
When using a C macro with stringized variables, all the code after the # will
appear greyed-out as a preprocessor directive:
#define MIN(a, b) (a < b ? a
: b)
#define LARGEST_INT_TYPE unsign…
-
```
When using a C macro with stringized variables, all the code after the # will
appear greyed-out as a preprocessor directive:
#define MIN(a, b) (a < b ? a
: b)
#define LARGEST_INT_TYPE unsign…
-
```
When using a C macro with stringized variables, all the code after the # will
appear greyed-out as a preprocessor directive:
#define MIN(a, b) (a < b ? a
: b)
#define LARGEST_INT_TYPE unsign…
-
```
When using a C macro with stringized variables, all the code after the # will
appear greyed-out as a preprocessor directive:
#define MIN(a, b) (a < b ? a
: b)
#define LARGEST_INT_TYPE unsign…
-
```
When using a C macro with stringized variables, all the code after the # will
appear greyed-out as a preprocessor directive:
#define MIN(a, b) (a < b ? a
: b)
#define LARGEST_INT_TYPE unsign…
-
```
When using a C macro with stringized variables, all the code after the # will
appear greyed-out as a preprocessor directive:
#define MIN(a, b) (a < b ? a
: b)
#define LARGEST_INT_TYPE unsign…
-
```
When using a C macro with stringized variables, all the code after the # will
appear greyed-out as a preprocessor directive:
#define MIN(a, b) (a < b ? a
: b)
#define LARGEST_INT_TYPE unsign…
-
```
When using a C macro with stringized variables, all the code after the # will
appear greyed-out as a preprocessor directive:
#define MIN(a, b) (a < b ? a
: b)
#define LARGEST_INT_TYPE unsign…
-
```
When using a C macro with stringized variables, all the code after the # will
appear greyed-out as a preprocessor directive:
#define MIN(a, b) (a < b ? a
: b)
#define LARGEST_INT_TYPE unsign…