ASSERT(3) | MidnightBSD Library Functions Manual | ASSERT(3) |
assert
—
expression verification macro
#include
<assert.h>
assert
(expression);
The
assert
()
macro tests the given expression and if it is false,
the calling process is terminated. A diagnostic message is written to
stderr
and the function
abort(3) is called,
effectively terminating the program.
If expression is true, the
assert
()
macro does nothing.
The
assert
()
macro may be removed at compile time by defining
NDEBUG
as a macro (e.g., by using the
cc(1) option
-D
NDEBUG
). Unlike most other
include files, <assert.h>
may be included multiple times. Each time whether or not
NDEBUG
is defined determines the behavior of assert
from that point forward until the end of the unit or another include of
<assert.h>
.
The
assert
()
macro should only be used for ensuring the developer's expectations hold
true. It is not appropriate for regular run-time error detection.
The assertion:
assert(1 == 0);
Assertion failed: (1 == 0), function
main, file main.c, line 100.
The following assert tries to assert there was no partial read:
assert(read(fd, buf, nbytes) ==
nbytes);
NDEBUG
is defined, changing the semantics of the
program.
The assert
() macro conforms to
ISO/IEC 9899:1999
(“ISO C99”).
An assert
macro appeared in
Version 7 AT&T UNIX.
May 31, 2018 | midnightbsd-3.1 |