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When defining macros, put parentheses around all variable names. This ensures that the macro is evaluated in a predictable manner.

Non-compliant Code Example

#define PRODUCT(A,B) A * B
int a = PRODUCT(3+4, 5)

PRODUCT(3+4, 5) is converted to 3+4 * 5 by the preprocessor, which the compiler intreprets as 3+(4*5) = 23. Presumably, this does not match the intended behavior of the macro which is (3+4) * 5 = 35.

Compliant Code Example

#define PRODUCT(A,B) (A) * (B)
int a = PRODUCT(3+4, 5)

By adding parentheses around each argument, this macro (correctly) evaluates to 35.

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