source: Daodan/MinGW/include/w32api.h@ 1165

Last change on this file since 1165 was 1046, checked in by alloc, 8 years ago

Daodan: Added Windows MinGW and build batch file

File size: 7.8 KB
RevLine 
[1046]1/*
2 * w32api.h
3 *
4 * Package version identification, operating system support level set up,
5 * and "convenience" macros to be shared by all package header files.
6 *
7 * $Id: w32api.h.in,v 7daa0459f602 2016/05/03 17:40:54 keithmarshall $
8 *
9 * Written by Earnie Boyd <earnie@users.sourceforge.net>
10 * Copyright (C) 2001-2011, 2015, 2016, MinGW.org Project
11 *
12 *
13 * Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a
14 * copy of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"),
15 * to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation
16 * the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense,
17 * and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the
18 * Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
19 *
20 * The above copyright notice and this permission notice (including the next
21 * paragraph) shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the
22 * Software.
23 *
24 * THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR
25 * IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY,
26 * FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE
27 * AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER
28 * LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING
29 * FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER
30 * DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.
31 *
32 */
33#ifndef _W32API_H
34#define _W32API_H
35#pragma GCC system_header
36
37/* Package version identification: formerly specified as a simple
38 * dotted numeric pair representing major.minor, this doesn't adapt
39 * well to the inclusion of the patch-level, since the dotted triplet
40 * representation of major.minor.patch is not a valid representation
41 * of a numeric entity. Thus, from version 3.18 onwards we adopt a
42 * representation which encodes the version as a long integer value,
43 * expressing:
44 *
45 * __W32API_VERSION = 1,000,000 * major + 1,000 * minor + patch
46 *
47 * DO NOT EDIT these package version assignments manually; they are
48 * derived from the package version specification within configure.ac,
49 * whence they are propagated automatically, at package build time.
50 */
51#define __W32API_VERSION 3018001L
52#define __W32API_MAJOR_VERSION 3
53#define __W32API_MINOR_VERSION 18
54#define __W32API_PATCHLEVEL 1
55
56/* The underlying operating system platform version, and its
57 * identifying macros for application support, are established by:
58 */
59#include <sdkddkver.h>
60
61/* The following defines are for documentation purposes. Although not used
62 * within it, they were provided in earlier versions of the Win32 API, as a
63 * convenience for users who wished to symbolically declare a minimum level
64 * of required operating system and Internet Explorer version support, when
65 * assigning WINVER, _WIN32_WINDOWS, _WIN32_WINNT, and _WIN32_IE values.
66 *
67 * Each of the following "old name" macros is now considered deprecated in
68 * favour of manifest "preferred name" macro definitions from <sdkddkver.h>.
69 * Hence, redefine each in terms of the appropriate "preferred name" macro;
70 * new code should avoid the old names, and use the preferred name instead.
71 *
72 *
73 * _WIN32_WINDOWS and/or WINVER may be set to any of the following manifest
74 * values, to specify a minimum Win9x support level requirement:
75 *
76 * Old Name Preferred Name
77 * ------------- ------------------
78 */
79#define Windows95 _WIN32_WINDOWS_95
80#define Windows98 _WIN32_WINDOWS_98
81#define WindowsME _WIN32_WINDOWS_ME
82
83/* _WIN32_WINNT and/or WINVER may be set to any of the following manifest
84 * values, to specify a minimum WinNT support level requirement:
85 *
86 * Old Name Preferred Name
87 * ------------- ------------------
88 */
89#define WindowsNT4 _WIN32_WINNT_NT4
90#define Windows2000 _WIN32_WINNT_WIN2K
91#define WindowsXP _WIN32_WINNT_WINXP
92#define Windows2003 _WIN32_WINNT_WS03
93#define WindowsVista _WIN32_WINNT_VISTA
94
95/* _WIN32_IE may be set to any of the following manifest values, to
96 * specify a minimum Internet Explorer support level requirement:
97 *
98 * Old Name Preferred Name
99 * ------------- ------------------
100 */
101#define IE3 _WIN32_IE_IE30
102#define IE301 _WIN32_IE_IE301
103#define IE302 _WIN32_IE_IE302
104#define IE4 _WIN32_IE_IE40
105#define IE401 _WIN32_IE_IE401
106#define IE5 _WIN32_IE_IE50
107#define IE5a _WIN32_IE_IE50
108#define IE5b _WIN32_IE_IE50
109#define IE501 _WIN32_IE_IE501
110#define IE55 _WIN32_IE_IE55
111#define IE56 _WIN32_IE_IE56
112#define IE6 _WIN32_IE_IE60
113#define IE601 _WIN32_IE_IE60SP1
114#define IE602 _WIN32_IE_IE60SP2
115#define IE7 _WIN32_IE_IE70
116
117
118/* Only Microsoft could attempt to justify this insanity: when building
119 * a UTF-16LE application -- apparently their understanding of Unicode is
120 * limited to this -- the C/C++ runtime requires that the user must define
121 * the _UNICODE macro, while to use the Windows API's UTF-16LE capabilities,
122 * it is the UNICODE macro, (without the leading underscore), which must be
123 * defined. The (bogus) explanation appears to be that it is the C standard
124 * which dictates the requirement for the leading underscore, to avoid any
125 * possible conflict with a user defined symbol; (bogus because the macro
126 * must be user defined anyway -- it is not a private symbol -- and in
127 * any case, the Windows API already reserves the UNICODE symbol as
128 * a user defined macro, with equivalent intent.
129 *
130 * The real explanation, of course, is that this is just another example
131 * of Microsoft irrationality; in any event, there seems to be no sane
132 * scenario in which defining one without the other would be required,
133 * or indeed would not raise potential for internal inconsistency, so we
134 * ensure that either both are, or neither is defined.
135 */
136#if defined UNICODE && ! defined _UNICODE
137# define _UNICODE UNICODE
138#elif defined _UNICODE && ! defined UNICODE
139# define UNICODE _UNICODE
140#endif
141/* Related to the UNICODE macro definition, there are many functions in
142 * the Win32 API with a generic name, which is mapped to a variant with
143 * wchar_t UTF-16LE encoding of string arguments, in cases when UNICODE
144 * is defined, as facilitated by the following macro...
145 */
146#ifdef UNICODE
147 /* ...by appending a "W" suffix to the generic function name...
148 */
149# define __AW_SUFFIXED__(__NAME__) __NAME__##W
150#else
151 /* ...or by appending an "A" suffix, to select an ANSI variant with
152 * char encoding of string arguments, when UNICODE is not defined.
153 */
154# define __AW_SUFFIXED__(__NAME__) __NAME__##A
155#endif
156/* Further related, the __AW_EXTENDED__ macro reproduces the effect of
157 * __AW_SUFFIXED__, with the addition of a single underscore character
158 * separating the base name from the appropriate suffix.
159 */
160#define __AW_EXTENDED__(__NAME__) __AW_SUFFIXED__(__NAME__##_)
161
162/* __AW_EXTENDED__ may often be used to map manifest string constants.
163 * The following triplet provide a convenient mechanism to derive the
164 * UNICODE variant of the string from its ANSI definition; (note that
165 * this requires a two stage expansion, to ensure that the "L" prefix
166 * is attached to the expansion of the ANSI string definition, rather
167 * than just to the defining macro name).
168 */
169#define __AW_STRING_A__(__TEXT__) __TEXT__
170#define __AW__WCHAR_T__(__TEXT__) __AW_STRING_A__(L##__TEXT__)
171#define __AW_STRING_W__(__TEXT__) __AW__WCHAR_T__(__TEXT__)
172
173#ifdef __cplusplus
174/* When compiling C++ code, these macros provide a convenient notation
175 * for designating those sections of system header files which declare
176 * prototypes for API functions with "C" binding...
177 */
178# define _EXTERN_C extern "C"
179# define _BEGIN_C_DECLS extern "C" {
180# define _END_C_DECLS }
181
182#else
183/* ...while remaining transparent, when compiling C code.
184 */
185# define _EXTERN_C extern
186# define _BEGIN_C_DECLS
187# define _END_C_DECLS
188#endif
189
190#endif /* ! _W32API_H: $RCSfile: w32api.h.in,v $: end of file */
Note: See TracBrowser for help on using the repository browser.