C Program to demonstrate usage of #error directive

    The #error directive is one of the C preprocessor directives whose purpose is to stop the compilation process when a violation of constraint is found.

    Advertisements

    This program demonstrates the use of #error directive in Turbo C++ that is running on a DOS Box 0.74 system running on a Windows 7 64-bit PC.

    Problem Definition

    In this program, we are trying to write a program for finding q square-root of a number. To find square root we need a function called sqrt() which is part of Math.h header file.

    Advertisements

    The header file is not included in the programming which is an error. The #error directive will find this error and throw a user-defined message before terminating the compilation process.

    Program Code – #error

#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#ifndef _MATH_H
#error First include header file then compile
#else
main()
{

    float a,b = 25;
          a = sqrt(b);

          printf("%f\n",a);

          return 0;

}

#endif

Output – #error directive

The output from the program is a compilation error – #error directive in turbo C++ compiler.

First include header file then compile
Advertisements

Ads Blocker Detected!!!

We have detected that you are using extensions to block ads. Please support us by disabling these ads blocker.

Exit mobile version