As for the #include-parser, the moc-detector's minimal C preprocessor
could be confused by a raw string into ignoring large chunks of code.
Change-Id: Id688e9a1f04628ce75a51a7d15269078c734288e
Reviewed-by: Oswald Buddenhagen <oswald.buddenhagen@theqtcompany.com>
The C preprocessor allows backslash-newline anywhere and allows
comments anywhere it allows space. Testing wilfully perverse
applications of that revealed qmake's parsing of #include directives
wasn't very robust. So rework to actually follow the rules and add
those tests.
Change-Id: If5cc7bfb65f9994e9ab9ed216dd1ee7285c63934
Reviewed-by: Oswald Buddenhagen <oswald.buddenhagen@theqtcompany.com>
Can't sensibly test unless the compiler does support raw strings,
since any test that would catch qmake's (prior) inability to parse raw
strings would necessarily confuse the C++ compiler in the same way.
This even applies (in test app code) to any #if-ery around the raw
string, since tokenization happens before preprocessor directives are
resolved. So the #if-ery on Q_COMPILER_RAW_STRINGS has to be in
tst_qmake.cpp, not the test app it builds.
Change-Id: I4a461f515adff288b54fb273fd9996f9b906d11c
Reviewed-by: Oswald Buddenhagen <oswald.buddenhagen@theqtcompany.com>