How to split strings across multiple lines in CMake?

Cmake

Cmake Problem Overview


I usually have a policy in my project, to never create lines in text files that exceed a line length of 80, so they are easily editable in all kinds of editors (you know the deal). But with CMake I get the problem that I do not know how to split a simple string into multiple lines to avoid one huge line. Consider this basic code:

set(MYPROJ_VERSION_MAJOR "1")
set(MYPROJ_VERSION_MINOR "0")
set(MYPROJ_VERSION_PATCH "0")
set(MYPROJ_VERSION_EXTRA "rc1")
set(MYPROJ_VERSION "${VERSION_MAJOR}.${VERSION_MINOR}.${VERSION_PATCH}-${VERSION_EXTRA}")

It already exceeds the 80 column limit. So how do I break a line in CMake into multiple lines without getting to verbose (multiple list(APPEND ...) or the like)?

Cmake Solutions


Solution 1 - Cmake

Update for CMake 3.0 and newer :

line continuation is possible with \. see cmake-3.0-doc

message("\
This is the first line of a quoted argument. \
In fact it is the only line but since it is long \
the source code uses line continuation.\
")
Availability of CMake versions:

Debian Wheezy (2013): 2.8.9
Debian Wheezy-backports: 2.8.11
Debian Jessy (2015): 3.0.2
Ubuntu 14.04 (LTS): 2.8.12
Ubuntu 15.04 : 3.0.2
Mac OSX : cmake-3 available through Homebrew, Macports and Fink
Windows: cmake-3 available through Chocolatey

Solution 2 - Cmake

CMake 3.0 and newer

Use the string(CONCAT) command:

set(MYPROJ_VERSION_MAJOR "1")
set(MYPROJ_VERSION_MINOR "0")
set(MYPROJ_VERSION_PATCH "0")
set(MYPROJ_VERSION_EXTRA "rc1")
string(CONCAT MYPROJ_VERSION "${MYPROJ_VERSION_MAJOR}"
                             ".${MYPROJ_VERSION_MINOR}"
                             ".${MYPROJ_VERSION_PATCH}"
                             "-${MYPROJ_VERSION_EXTRA}")

Although CMake 3.0 and newer support line continuation of quoted arguments, you cannot indent the second or subsequent lines without getting the indentation whitespace included in your string.

CMake 2.8 and older

You can use a list. Each element of the list can be put on a new line:

set(MYPROJ_VERSION_MAJOR "1")
set(MYPROJ_VERSION_MINOR "0")
set(MYPROJ_VERSION_PATCH "0")
set(MYPROJ_VERSION_EXTRA "rc1")
set(MYPROJ_VERSION_LIST "${MYPROJ_VERSION_MAJOR}"
                        ".${MYPROJ_VERSION_MINOR}"
                        ".${MYPROJ_VERSION_PATCH}"
                        "-${MYPROJ_VERSION_EXTRA}")

A list used without quotes is concatenated without white-space:

message(STATUS "Version: " ${MYPROJ_VERSION_LIST})
-- Version: 1.0.0-rc1

If you really need a string, you can convert the list to a string first:

string(REPLACE ";" "" MYPROJ_VERSION "${MYPROJ_VERSION_LIST}")
message(STATUS "Version: ${MYPROJ_VERSION}")
-- Version: 1.0.0-rc1

Any semicolons in your original strings will be seen as list element separators, and removed. They must be escaped:

set(MY_LIST "Hello World "
            "with a \;semicolon")

Solution 3 - Cmake

For those who were brought here from How do I split a CMake generator expression to multiple lines? I would like to add some notes.

The line continuation method will not work, CMake cannot parse a generator list made with whitespace (indentation) and line continuation.

While the string(CONCAT) solution will provide a generator expression that can be evaluated, the evaluated expression will be surrounded by quotes if the result contains a space.

For each individual option to be added a separate generator list must be constructed, so stacking options like I have done in the following will cause the build to fail:

string(CONCAT WARNING_OPTIONS "$<"
    "$<OR:"
        "$<CXX_COMPILER_ID:MSVC>,"
        "$<STREQUAL:${CMAKE_CXX_SIMULATE_ID},MSVC>"
    ">:"
    "/D_CRT_SECURE_NO_WARNINGS "
">$<"
    "$<AND:"
        "$<CXX_COMPILER_ID:Clang,GNU>,"
        "$<NOT:$<STREQUAL:${CMAKE_CXX_SIMULATE_ID},MSVC>>"
    ">:"
    "-Wall -Werror "
">$<"
    "$<CXX_COMPILER_ID:GNU>:"
    "-Wno-multichar -Wno-sign-compare "
">")
add_compile_options(${WARNING_OPTIONS})

This is because the resulting options are passed to the compiler in quotes

/usr/lib64/ccache/c++  -DGTEST_CREATE_SHARED_LIBRARY=1 -Dgtest_EXPORTS -I../ThirdParty/googletest/googletest/include -I../ThirdParty/googletest/googletest -std=c++11 -fno-rtti -fno-exceptions -fPIC    -std=c++11 -fno-rtti -fno-exceptions -Wall -Wshadow -DGTEST_HAS_PTHREAD=1 -fexceptions -Wextra -Wno-unused-parameter -Wno-missing-field-initializers "-Wall -Werror -Wno-multichar -Wno-sign-compare " -fdiagnostics-color -MD -MT ThirdParty/googletest/googletest/CMakeFiles/gtest.dir/src/gtest-all.cc.o -MF ThirdParty/googletest/googletest/CMakeFiles/gtest.dir/src/gtest-all.cc.o.d -o ThirdParty/googletest/googletest/CMakeFiles/gtest.dir/src/gtest-all.cc.o -c ../ThirdParty/googletest/googletest/src/gtest-all.cc
c++: error: unrecognized command line option ‘-Wall -Werror -Wno-multichar -Wno-sign-compare ’

To evaluate lengthy generator expressions represented using the string(CONCAT) solution, each generator expression must evaluate to a single option with no spaces:

string(CONCAT WALL "$<"
    "$<AND:"
        "$<CXX_COMPILER_ID:Clang,GNU>,"
        "$<NOT:$<STREQUAL:${CMAKE_CXX_SIMULATE_ID},MSVC>>"
    ">:"
    "-Wall"
">")
string(CONCAT WERROR "$<"
    "$<AND:"
        "$<CXX_COMPILER_ID:Clang,GNU>,"
        "$<NOT:$<STREQUAL:${CMAKE_CXX_SIMULATE_ID},MSVC>>"
    ">:"
    "-Werror"
">")
message(STATUS "Warning Options: " ${WALL} ${WERROR})
add_compile_options(${WALL} ${WERROR})

This may be unrelated to the question I am posting an answer to, unfortunately the question I am answering is wrongfully marked as a duplicate of this question.

Generator lists are not handled and parsed the same way as strings are, and because of this, there are additional measures one must take to split a generator list across multiple lines.

Solution 4 - Cmake

It's still a little verbose, but if the 80 char limit really bugs you then you could repeatedly append to the same variable:

set(MYPROJ_VERSION_MAJOR "1")
set(MYPROJ_VERSION_MINOR "0")
set(MYPROJ_VERSION_PATCH "0")
set(MYPROJ_VERSION_EXTRA "rc1")
set(MYPROJ_VERSION "${MYPROJ_VERSION_MAJOR}.")
set(MYPROJ_VERSION "${MYPROJ_VERSION}${MYPROJ_VERSION_MINOR}.")
set(MYPROJ_VERSION "${MYPROJ_VERSION}${MYPROJ_VERSION_PATCH}-")
set(MYPROJ_VERSION "${MYPROJ_VERSION}${MYPROJ_VERSION_EXTRA}")
message(STATUS "version: ${MYPROJ_VERSION}")

Gives output:

$ cmake  ~/project/tmp
-- version: 1.0.0-rc1
-- Configuring done
-- Generating done
-- Build files have been written to: /home/rsanderson/build/temp

Solution 5 - Cmake

The example in the original question is only about a relatively short string. For longer strings (including the examples given in other answers), a bracket argument could be better. From the documentation:

> An opening bracket is written [ followed by zero or more = followed by [. The corresponding closing bracket is written ] followed by the same number of = followed by ]. Brackets do not nest. A unique length may always be chosen for the opening and closing brackets to contain closing brackets of other lengths. > > [...] > > For example: > > message([=[ > This is the first line in a bracket argument with bracket length 1. > No \-escape sequences or ${variable} references are evaluated. > This is always one argument even though it contains a ; character. > The text does not end on a closing bracket of length 0 like ]]. > It does end in a closing bracket of length 1. > ]=]) >

Solution 6 - Cmake

There is no way to split a string literal across multiple lines in CMakeLists.txt files or in CMake scripts. If you include a newline within a string, there will be a literal newline in the string itself.

# Don't do this, it won't work, MYPROJ_VERSION will contain newline characters:
set(MYPROJ_VERSION "${VERSION_MAJOR}.
  ${VERSION_MINOR}.${VERSION_PATCH}-
  ${VERSION_EXTRA}")

However, CMake uses whitespace to separate arguments, so you can change a space that's an argument separator into a newline anywhere you like, without changing the behavior.

You could re-phrase this longer line:

set(MYPROJ_VERSION "${VERSION_MAJOR}.${VERSION_MINOR}.${VERSION_PATCH}-${VERSION_EXTRA}")

as these two shorter lines:

set(MYPROJ_VERSION
  "${VERSION_MAJOR}.${VERSION_MINOR}.${VERSION_PATCH}-${VERSION_EXTRA}")

They are entirely equivalent.

Solution 7 - Cmake

To maintain good indentation in your code it's straightforward enough just to do

message("These strings " "will all be "
        "concatenated. Don't forget "
        "your trailing spaces!")

Or form a string directly with

string(CONCAT MYSTR "This and " "that "
                    "and me too!")

as in Douglas' answer who has more details. However I thought this might just summarise the essential point.

Attributions

All content for this solution is sourced from the original question on Stackoverflow.

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Content TypeOriginal AuthorOriginal Content on Stackoverflow
QuestionLukas SchmelzeisenView Question on Stackoverflow
Solution 1 - CmakeHotschkeView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 2 - CmakeDouglas RoydsView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 3 - CmakeParker GibsonView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 4 - CmakeRian SandersonView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 5 - Cmakeingomueller.netView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 6 - CmakeDLRdaveView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 7 - CmakewardwView Answer on Stackoverflow