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CMAKE-GENERATOR-EXPRESSIONS(7)	     CMake	CMAKE-GENERATOR-EXPRESSIONS(7)

NAME
       cmake-generator-expressions - CMake Generator Expressions

INTRODUCTION
       Generator  expressions  are evaluated during build system generation to
       produce information specific to each build configuration.

       Generator expressions are allowed in the	context	of many	target proper-
       ties,  such as LINK_LIBRARIES, INCLUDE_DIRECTORIES, COMPILE_DEFINITIONS
       and others.  They may also be used  when	 using	commands  to  populate
       those  properties,  such	as target_link_libraries(), target_include_di-
       rectories(), target_compile_definitions() and others.

       They enable conditional linking,	conditional definitions	used when com-
       piling,	conditional include directories, and more.  The	conditions may
       be based	on the build configuration, target properties, platform	infor-
       mation or any other queryable information.

       Generator  expressions  have the	form $<...>.  To avoid confusion, this
       page deviates from most of the CMake documentation in that it omits an-
       gular  brackets	<...> around placeholders like condition, string, tar-
       get, among others.

       Generator expressions can be nested, as shown in	most of	 the  examples
       below.

BOOLEAN	GENERATOR EXPRESSIONS
       Boolean expressions evaluate to either 0	or 1.  They are	typically used
       to construct the	condition in a conditional generator expression.

       Available boolean expressions are:

   Logical Operators
       $<BOOL:string>
	      Converts string to 0 or 1. Evaluates to 0	if any of the  follow-
	      ing is true:

	      o	string is empty,

	      o	string	is  a  case-insensitive	equal of 0, FALSE, OFF,	N, NO,
		IGNORE,	or NOTFOUND, or

	      o	string ends in the suffix -NOTFOUND (case-sensitive).

	      Otherwise	evaluates to 1.

       $<AND:conditions>
	      where conditions is a comma-separated list  of  boolean  expres-
	      sions.  Evaluates	to 1 if	all conditions are 1.  Otherwise eval-
	      uates to 0.

       $<OR:conditions>
	      where conditions is a comma-separated list  of  boolean  expres-
	      sions.   Evaluates  to 1 if at least one of the conditions is 1.
	      Otherwise	evaluates to 0.

       $<NOT:condition>
	      0	if condition is	1, else	1.

   String Comparisons
       $<STREQUAL:string1,string2>
	      1	if string1 and string2 are equal, else 0.  The	comparison  is
	      case-sensitive.  For a case-insensitive comparison, combine with
	      a	string transforming generator expression,

		 $<STREQUAL:$<UPPER_CASE:${foo}>,"BAR">	# "1" if ${foo}	is any of "BAR", "Bar",	"bar", ...

       $<EQUAL:value1,value2>
	      1	if value1 and value2 are numerically equal, else 0.

       $<IN_LIST:string,list>
	      1	if string is member of the semicolon-separated list,  else  0.
	      Uses case-sensitive comparisons.

       $<VERSION_LESS:v1,v2>
	      1	if v1 is a version less	than v2, else 0.

       $<VERSION_GREATER:v1,v2>
	      1	if v1 is a version greater than	v2, else 0.

       $<VERSION_EQUAL:v1,v2>
	      1	if v1 is the same version as v2, else 0.

       $<VERSION_LESS_EQUAL:v1,v2>
	      1	if v1 is a version less	than or	equal to v2, else 0.

       $<VERSION_GREATER_EQUAL:v1,v2>
	      1	if v1 is a version greater than	or equal to v2,	else 0.

   Variable Queries
       $<TARGET_EXISTS:target>
	      1	if target exists, else 0.

       $<CONFIG:cfgs>
	      1	if config is any one of	the entries in cfgs, else 0. This is a
	      case-insensitive comparison. The	mapping	 in  MAP_IMPORTED_CON-
	      FIG_<CONFIG>  is	also  considered by this expression when it is
	      evaluated	on a property on an IMPORTED target.

       $<PLATFORM_ID:platform_ids>
	      where platform_ids is a comma-separated list.  1 if the  CMake's
	      platform id matches any one of the entries in platform_ids, oth-
	      erwise 0.	 See also the CMAKE_SYSTEM_NAME	variable.

       $<C_COMPILER_ID:compiler_ids>
	      where compiler_ids is a comma-separated list.  1 if the  CMake's
	      compiler	id of the C compiler matches any one of	the entries in
	      compiler_ids,  otherwise	0.   See  also	the  CMAKE_<LANG>_COM-
	      PILER_ID variable.

       $<CXX_COMPILER_ID:compiler_ids>
	      where  compiler_ids is a comma-separated list.  1	if the CMake's
	      compiler id of the CXX compiler matches any one of  the  entries
	      in  compiler_ids,	 otherwise  0.	See also the CMAKE_<LANG>_COM-
	      PILER_ID variable.

       $<CUDA_COMPILER_ID:compiler_ids>
	      where compiler_ids is a comma-separated list.  1 if the  CMake's
	      compiler	id of the CUDA compiler	matches	any one	of the entries
	      in compiler_ids, otherwise 0.  See  also	the  CMAKE_<LANG>_COM-
	      PILER_ID variable.

       $<OBJC_COMPILER_ID:compiler_ids>
	      where  compiler_ids is a comma-separated list.  1	if the CMake's
	      compiler id of the Objective-C compiler matches any one  of  the
	      entries	in   compiler_ids,   otherwise	 0.    See   also  the
	      CMAKE_<LANG>_COMPILER_ID variable.

       $<OBJCXX_COMPILER_ID:compiler_ids>
	      where compiler_ids is a comma-separated list.  1 if the  CMake's
	      compiler id of the Objective-C++ compiler	matches	any one	of the
	      entries  in   compiler_ids,   otherwise	0.    See   also   the
	      CMAKE_<LANG>_COMPILER_ID variable.

       $<Fortran_COMPILER_ID:compiler_ids>
	      where  compiler_ids is a comma-separated list.  1	if the CMake's
	      compiler id of the Fortran compiler matches any one of  the  en-
	      tries    in   compiler_ids,   otherwise	0.    See   also   the
	      CMAKE_<LANG>_COMPILER_ID variable.

       $<ISPC_COMPILER_ID:compiler_ids>
	      where compiler_ids is a comma-separated list.  1 if the  CMake's
	      compiler	id of the ISPC compiler	matches	any one	of the entries
	      in compiler_ids, otherwise 0.  See  also	the  CMAKE_<LANG>_COM-
	      PILER_ID variable.

       $<C_COMPILER_VERSION:version>
	      1	if the version of the C	compiler matches version, otherwise 0.
	      See also the CMAKE_<LANG>_COMPILER_VERSION variable.

       $<CXX_COMPILER_VERSION:version>
	      1	if the version of the CXX compiler matches version,  otherwise
	      0.  See also the CMAKE_<LANG>_COMPILER_VERSION variable.

       $<CUDA_COMPILER_VERSION:version>
	      1	 if the	version	of the CXX compiler matches version, otherwise
	      0.  See also the CMAKE_<LANG>_COMPILER_VERSION variable.

       $<OBJC_COMPILER_VERSION:version>
	      1	if the version of the OBJC compiler matches version, otherwise
	      0.  See also the CMAKE_<LANG>_COMPILER_VERSION variable.

       $<OBJCXX_COMPILER_VERSION:version>
	      1	 if the	version	of the OBJCXX compiler matches version,	other-
	      wise 0.  See also	the CMAKE_<LANG>_COMPILER_VERSION variable.

       $<Fortran_COMPILER_VERSION:version>
	      1	if the version of the Fortran compiler matches version,	other-
	      wise 0.  See also	the CMAKE_<LANG>_COMPILER_VERSION variable.

       $<ISPC_COMPILER_VERSION:version>
	      1	if the version of the ISPC compiler matches version, otherwise
	      0.  See also the CMAKE_<LANG>_COMPILER_VERSION variable.

       $<TARGET_POLICY:policy>
	      1	if the policy was NEW when the 'head' target was created, else
	      0.   If the policy was not set, the warning message for the pol-
	      icy will be emitted. This	generator expression only works	for  a
	      subset of	policies.

       $<COMPILE_FEATURES:features>
	      where features is	a comma-spearated list.	 Evaluates to 1	if all
	      of the features are available for	the 'head' target, and 0  oth-
	      erwise. If this expression is used while evaluating the link im-
	      plementation of a	target and if any dependency transitively  in-
	      creases  the  required C_STANDARD	or CXX_STANDARD	for the	'head'
	      target, an error is reported.  See the cmake-compile-features(7)
	      manual  for  information	on compile features and	a list of sup-
	      ported compilers.

       $<COMPILE_LANG_AND_ID:language,compiler_ids>
	      1	when the language used for compilation unit  matches  language
	      and the CMake's compiler id of the language compiler matches any
	      one of the entries in compiler_ids, otherwise 0. This expression
	      is  a  short form	for the	combination of $<COMPILE_LANGUAGE:lan-
	      guage> and $<LANG_COMPILER_ID:compiler_ids>. This	expression may
	      be used to specify compile options, compile definitions, and in-
	      clude directories	for source files of a particular language  and
	      compiler combination in a	target.	For example:

		 add_executable(myapp main.cpp foo.c bar.cpp zot.cu)
		 target_compile_definitions(myapp
		   PRIVATE $<$<COMPILE_LANG_AND_ID:CXX,AppleClang,Clang>:COMPILING_CXX_WITH_CLANG>
			   $<$<COMPILE_LANG_AND_ID:CXX,Intel>:COMPILING_CXX_WITH_INTEL>
			   $<$<COMPILE_LANG_AND_ID:C,Clang>:COMPILING_C_WITH_CLANG>
		 )

	      This specifies the use of	different compile definitions based on
	      both the compiler	id and compilation language. This example will
	      have a COMPILING_CXX_WITH_CLANG compile definition when Clang is
	      the CXX compiler,	and COMPILING_CXX_WITH_INTEL when Intel	is the
	      CXX  compiler.   Likewise	 when  the C compiler is Clang it will
	      only see the  COMPILING_C_WITH_CLANG definition.

	      Without the COMPILE_LANG_AND_ID generator	 expression  the  same
	      logic would be expressed as:

		 target_compile_definitions(myapp
		   PRIVATE $<$<AND:$<COMPILE_LANGUAGE:CXX>,$<CXX_COMPILER_ID:AppleClang,Clang>>:COMPILING_CXX_WITH_CLANG>
			   $<$<AND:$<COMPILE_LANGUAGE:CXX>,$<CXX_COMPILER_ID:Intel>>:COMPILING_CXX_WITH_INTEL>
			   $<$<AND:$<COMPILE_LANGUAGE:C>,$<C_COMPILER_ID:Clang>>:COMPILING_C_WITH_CLANG>
		 )

       $<COMPILE_LANGUAGE:languages>
	      1	when the language used for compilation unit matches any	of the
	      entries in languages, otherwise 0.  This expression may be  used
	      to specify compile options, compile definitions, and include di-
	      rectories	for source files of a particular language in a target.
	      For example:

		 add_executable(myapp main.cpp foo.c bar.cpp zot.cu)
		 target_compile_options(myapp
		   PRIVATE $<$<COMPILE_LANGUAGE:CXX>:-fno-exceptions>
		 )
		 target_compile_definitions(myapp
		   PRIVATE $<$<COMPILE_LANGUAGE:CXX>:COMPILING_CXX>
			   $<$<COMPILE_LANGUAGE:CUDA>:COMPILING_CUDA>
		 )
		 target_include_directories(myapp
		   PRIVATE $<$<COMPILE_LANGUAGE:CXX,CUDA>:/opt/foo/headers>
		 )

	      This  specifies  the  use	of the -fno-exceptions compile option,
	      COMPILING_CXX compile definition,	and cxx_headers	include	direc-
	      tory  for	 C++ only (compiler id checks elided).	It also	speci-
	      fies a COMPILING_CUDA compile definition for CUDA.

	      Note that	with Visual Studio Generators and Xcode	 there	is  no
	      way  to represent	target-wide compile definitions	or include di-
	      rectories	separately for C and CXX languages.  Also, with	Visual
	      Studio Generators	there is no way	to represent target-wide flags
	      separately for C and CXX languages.  Under these generators, ex-
	      pressions	for both C and C++ sources will	be evaluated using CXX
	      if there are any C++ sources and otherwise  using	 C.   A	 work-
	      around is	to create separate libraries for each source file lan-
	      guage instead:

		 add_library(myapp_c foo.c)
		 add_library(myapp_cxx bar.cpp)
		 target_compile_options(myapp_cxx PUBLIC -fno-exceptions)
		 add_executable(myapp main.cpp)
		 target_link_libraries(myapp myapp_c myapp_cxx)

       $<LINK_LANG_AND_ID:language,compiler_ids>
	      1	when the language used for link	step matches language and  the
	      CMake's  compiler	 id  of	the language linker matches any	one of
	      the entries in compiler_ids, otherwise 0.	This expression	 is  a
	      short  form for the combination of $<LINK_LANGUAGE:language> and
	      $<LANG_COMPILER_ID:compiler_ids>.	This expression	may be used to
	      specify  link libraries, link options, link directories and link
	      dependencies of a	particular language and	linker combination  in
	      a	target.	For example:

		 add_library(libC_Clang	...)
		 add_library(libCXX_Clang ...)
		 add_library(libC_Intel	...)
		 add_library(libCXX_Intel ...)

		 add_executable(myapp main.c)
		 if (CXX_CONFIG)
		   target_sources(myapp	PRIVATE	file.cxx)
		 endif()
		 target_link_libraries(myapp
		   PRIVATE $<$<LINK_LANG_AND_ID:CXX,Clang,AppleClang>:libCXX_Clang>
			   $<$<LINK_LANG_AND_ID:C,Clang,AppleClang>:libC_Clang>
			   $<$<LINK_LANG_AND_ID:CXX,Intel>:libCXX_Intel>
			   $<$<LINK_LANG_AND_ID:C,Intel>:libC_Intel>)

	      This specifies the use of	different link libraries based on both
	      the compiler id and link language. This example will have	target
	      libCXX_Clang  as link dependency when Clang or AppleClang	is the
	      CXX linker, and libCXX_Intel  when  Intel	 is  the  CXX  linker.
	      Likewise	when  the  C  linker  is  Clang	 or AppleClang,	target
	      libC_Clang will be added as link dependency and libC_Intel  when
	      Intel is the C linker.

	      See  the	note  related  to  $<LINK_LANGUAGE:language>  for con-
	      straints about the usage of this generator expression.

       $<LINK_LANGUAGE:languages>
	      1	when the language used for link	step matches any  of  the  en-
	      tries in languages, otherwise 0.	This expression	may be used to
	      specify link libraries, link options, link directories and  link
	      dependencies of a	particular language in a target. For example:

		 add_library(api_C ...)
		 add_library(api_CXX ...)
		 add_library(api INTERFACE)
		 target_link_options(api INTERFACE $<$<LINK_LANGUAGE:C>:-opt_c>
						     $<$<LINK_LANGUAGE:CXX>:-opt_cxx>)
		 target_link_libraries(api INTERFACE $<$<LINK_LANGUAGE:C>:api_C>
						     $<$<LINK_LANGUAGE:CXX>:api_CXX>)

		 add_executable(myapp1 main.c)
		 target_link_options(myapp1 PRIVATE api)

		 add_executable(myapp2 main.cpp)
		 target_link_options(myapp2 PRIVATE api)

	      This  specifies to use the api target for	linking	targets	myapp1
	      and myapp2. In practice, myapp1 will link	with target api_C  and
	      option -opt_c because it will use	C as link language. And	myapp2
	      will link	with api_CXX and option	-opt_cxx because CXX  will  be
	      the link language.

	      NOTE:
		 To determine the link language	of a target, it	is required to
		 collect, transitively,	all the	targets	which will  be	linked
		 to it.	So, for	link libraries properties, a double evaluation
		 will  be  done.  During  the  first  evaluation,  $<LINK_LAN-
		 GUAGE:..>  expressions	 will  always return 0.	 The link lan-
		 guage computed	after this first pass will be used to  do  the
		 second	 pass. To avoid	inconsistency, it is required that the
		 second	pass do	not change the	link  language.	 Moreover,  to
		 avoid unexpected side-effects,	it is required to specify com-
		 plete entities	as part	of the $<LINK_LANGUAGE:..> expression.
		 For example:

		     add_library(lib STATIC file.cxx)
		     add_library(libother STATIC file.c)

		     # bad usage
		     add_executable(myapp1 main.c)
		     target_link_libraries(myapp1 PRIVATE lib$<$<LINK_LANGUAGE:C>:other>)

		     # correct usage
		     add_executable(myapp2 main.c)
		     target_link_libraries(myapp2 PRIVATE $<$<LINK_LANGUAGE:C>:libother>)

		 In  this  example, for	myapp1,	the first pass will, unexpect-
		 edly, determine that the link language	 is  CXX  because  the
		 evaluation  of	 the  generator	 expression  will  be an empty
		 string	so myapp1 will depends on target lib which is C++.  On
		 the contrary, for myapp2, the first evaluation	will give C as
		 link language,	so the second pass will	correctly  add	target
		 libother as link dependency.

       $<DEVICE_LINK:list>
	      Returns  the  list  if it	is the device link step, an empty list
	      otherwise.  The device link step is controlled  by  CUDA_SEPARA-
	      BLE_COMPILATION  and  CUDA_RESOLVE_DEVICE_SYMBOLS	properties and
	      policy CMP0105. This expression can only be used to specify link
	      options.

       $<HOST_LINK:list>
	      Returns  the  list  if it	is the normal link step, an empty list
	      otherwise.  This expression is mainly useful when	a device  link
	      step is also involved (see $<DEVICE_LINK:list> generator expres-
	      sion). This expression can only be used to specify link options.

STRING-VALUED GENERATOR	EXPRESSIONS
       These expressions expand	to some	string.	 For example,

	  include_directories(/usr/include/$<CXX_COMPILER_ID>/)

       expands to /usr/include/GNU/ or /usr/include/Clang/ etc,	 depending  on
       the compiler identifier.

       String-valued  expressions may also be combined with other expressions.
       Here an example for a string-valued expression within a boolean expres-
       sions within a conditional expression:

	  $<$<VERSION_LESS:$<CXX_COMPILER_VERSION>,4.2.0>:OLD_COMPILER>

       expands	to OLD_COMPILER	if the CMAKE_CXX_COMPILER_VERSION is less than
       4.2.0.

       And here	two nested string-valued expressions:

	  -I$<JOIN:$<TARGET_PROPERTY:INCLUDE_DIRECTORIES>, -I>

       generates a string of the entries  in  the  INCLUDE_DIRECTORIES	target
       property	with each entry	preceded by -I.

       Expanding  on  the previous example, if one first wants to check	if the
       INCLUDE_DIRECTORIES property is non-empty, then it is advisable to  in-
       troduce a helper	variable to keep the code readable:

	  set(prop "$<TARGET_PROPERTY:INCLUDE_DIRECTORIES>") # helper variable
	  $<$<BOOL:${prop}>:-I$<JOIN:${prop}, -I>>

       The following string-valued generator expressions are available:

   Escaped Characters
       String  literals	to escape the special meaning a	character would	other-
       wise have:

       $<ANGLE-R>
	      A	literal	>. Used	for example to compare strings that contain  a
	      >.

       $<COMMA>
	      A	literal	,. Used	for example to compare strings which contain a
	      ,.

       $<SEMICOLON>
	      A	literal	;. Used	to prevent list	expansion on an	argument  with
	      ;.

   Conditional Expressions
       Conditional  generator  expressions  depend on a	boolean	condition that
       must be 0 or 1.

       $<condition:true_string>
	      Evaluates	to true_string if condition is 1.  Otherwise evaluates
	      to the empty string.

       $<IF:condition,true_string,false_string>
	      Evaluates	to true_string if condition is 1.  Otherwise evaluates
	      to false_string.

       Typically, the condition	is a boolean generator	expression.   For  in-
       stance,

	  $<$<CONFIG:Debug>:DEBUG_MODE>

       expands	to DEBUG_MODE when the Debug configuration is used, and	other-
       wise expands to the empty string.

   String Transformations
       $<JOIN:list,string>
	      Joins the	list with the content of string.

       $<REMOVE_DUPLICATES:list>
	      Removes duplicated items in the given list.

       $<FILTER:list,INCLUDE|EXCLUDE,regex>
	      Includes or removes items	from list that match the  regular  ex-
	      pression regex.

       $<LOWER_CASE:string>
	      Content of string	converted to lower case.

       $<UPPER_CASE:string>
	      Content of string	converted to upper case.

       $<GENEX_EVAL:expr>
	      Content  of expr evaluated as a generator	expression in the cur-
	      rent context. This enables consumption of	generator  expressions
	      whose evaluation results itself in generator expressions.

       $<TARGET_GENEX_EVAL:tgt,expr>
	      Content  of expr evaluated as a generator	expression in the con-
	      text of tgt target. This enables consumption  of	custom	target
	      properties that themselves contain generator expressions.

	      Having  the capability to	evaluate generator expressions is very
	      useful when you want to manage custom properties supporting gen-
	      erator expressions.  For example:

		 add_library(foo ...)

		 set_property(TARGET foo PROPERTY
		   CUSTOM_KEYS $<$<CONFIG:DEBUG>:FOO_EXTRA_THINGS>
		 )

		 add_custom_target(printFooKeys
		   COMMAND ${CMAKE_COMMAND} -E echo $<TARGET_PROPERTY:foo,CUSTOM_KEYS>
		 )

	      This  naive implementation of the	printFooKeys custom command is
	      wrong because CUSTOM_KEYS	target property	is not	evaluated  and
	      the  content  is	passed	as  is (i.e. $<$<CONFIG:DEBUG>:FOO_EX-
	      TRA_THINGS>).

	      To have the expected result (i.e.	FOO_EXTRA_THINGS if config  is
	      Debug),  it is required to evaluate the output of	$<TARGET_PROP-
	      ERTY:foo,CUSTOM_KEYS>:

		 add_custom_target(printFooKeys
		   COMMAND ${CMAKE_COMMAND} -E
		     echo $<TARGET_GENEX_EVAL:foo,$<TARGET_PROPERTY:foo,CUSTOM_KEYS>>
		 )

   Variable Queries
       $<CONFIG>
	      Configuration name.

       $<CONFIGURATION>
	      Configuration name. Deprecated since CMake 3.0. Use  CONFIG  in-
	      stead.

       $<PLATFORM_ID>
	      The current system's CMake platform id.  See also	the CMAKE_SYS-
	      TEM_NAME variable.

       $<C_COMPILER_ID>
	      The CMake's compiler id of the C compiler	used.	See  also  the
	      CMAKE_<LANG>_COMPILER_ID variable.

       $<CXX_COMPILER_ID>
	      The  CMake's compiler id of the CXX compiler used.  See also the
	      CMAKE_<LANG>_COMPILER_ID variable.

       $<CUDA_COMPILER_ID>
	      The CMake's compiler id of the CUDA compiler used.  See also the
	      CMAKE_<LANG>_COMPILER_ID variable.

       $<OBJC_COMPILER_ID>
	      The CMake's compiler id of the OBJC compiler used.  See also the
	      CMAKE_<LANG>_COMPILER_ID variable.

       $<OBJCXX_COMPILER_ID>
	      The CMake's compiler id of the OBJCXX compiler used.   See  also
	      the CMAKE_<LANG>_COMPILER_ID variable.

       $<Fortran_COMPILER_ID>
	      The  CMake's compiler id of the Fortran compiler used.  See also
	      the CMAKE_<LANG>_COMPILER_ID variable.

       $<ISPC_COMPILER_ID>
	      The CMake's compiler id of the ISPC compiler used.  See also the
	      CMAKE_<LANG>_COMPILER_ID variable.

       $<C_COMPILER_VERSION>
	      The   version   of   the	 C   compiler	used.	See  also  the
	      CMAKE_<LANG>_COMPILER_VERSION variable.

       $<CXX_COMPILER_VERSION>
	      The  version  of	the  CXX  compiler   used.    See   also   the
	      CMAKE_<LANG>_COMPILER_VERSION variable.

       $<CUDA_COMPILER_VERSION>
	      The   version   of   the	CUDA  compiler	used.	See  also  the
	      CMAKE_<LANG>_COMPILER_VERSION variable.

       $<OBJC_COMPILER_VERSION>
	      The  version  of	the  OBJC  compiler  used.    See   also   the
	      CMAKE_<LANG>_COMPILER_VERSION variable.

       $<OBJCXX_COMPILER_VERSION>
	      The   version  of	 the  OBJCXX  compiler	used.	See  also  the
	      CMAKE_<LANG>_COMPILER_VERSION variable.

       $<Fortran_COMPILER_VERSION>
	      The  version  of	the  Fortran  compiler	used.	See  also  the
	      CMAKE_<LANG>_COMPILER_VERSION variable.

       $<ISPC_COMPILER_VERSION>
	      The   version   of   the	ISPC  compiler	used.	See  also  the
	      CMAKE_<LANG>_COMPILER_VERSION variable.

       $<COMPILE_LANGUAGE>
	      The compile language of source files when	evaluating compile op-
	      tions.	See  the  related  boolean  expression	$<COMPILE_LAN-
	      GUAGE:language> for notes	about the portability of this  genera-
	      tor expression.

       $<LINK_LANGUAGE>
	      The  link	 language of target when evaluating link options.  See
	      the related  boolean  expression	$<LINK_LANGUAGE:language>  for
	      notes about the portability of this generator expression.

	      NOTE:
		 This  generator  expression  is not supported by the link li-
		 braries properties to avoid side-effects due  to  the	double
		 evaluation of these properties.

   Target-Dependent Queries
       These  queries refer to a target	tgt. This can be any runtime artifact,
       namely:

       o an executable target created by add_executable()

       o a shared library target (.so, .dll but	not their .lib import library)
	 created by add_library()

       o a static library target created by add_library()

       In  the	following, "the	tgt filename" means the	name of	the tgt	binary
       file. This has to be distinguished from "the  target  name",  which  is
       just the	string tgt.

       $<TARGET_NAME_IF_EXISTS:tgt>
	      The target name tgt if the target	exists,	an empty string	other-
	      wise.

	      Note that	tgt is not added as a dependency of  the  target  this
	      expression is evaluated on.

       $<TARGET_FILE:tgt>
	      Full path	to the tgt binary file.

       $<TARGET_FILE_BASE_NAME:tgt>
	      Base  name  of  tgt, i.e.	$<TARGET_FILE_NAME:tgt>	without	prefix
	      and suffix.  For example,	if the tgt filename is libbase.so, the
	      base name	is base.

	      See  also	 the  OUTPUT_NAME,  ARCHIVE_OUTPUT_NAME,  LIBRARY_OUT-
	      PUT_NAME and RUNTIME_OUTPUT_NAME	target	properties  and	 their
	      configuration   specific	 variants   OUTPUT_NAME_<CONFIG>,  AR-
	      CHIVE_OUTPUT_NAME_<CONFIG>,   LIBRARY_OUTPUT_NAME_<CONFIG>   and
	      RUNTIME_OUTPUT_NAME_<CONFIG>.

	      The  <CONFIG>_POSTFIX  and  DEBUG_POSTFIX	 target	properties can
	      also be considered.

	      Note that	tgt is not added as a dependency of  the  target  this
	      expression is evaluated on.

       $<TARGET_FILE_PREFIX:tgt>
	      Prefix of	the tgt	filename (such as lib).

	      See also the PREFIX target property.

	      Note  that  tgt  is not added as a dependency of the target this
	      expression is evaluated on.

       $<TARGET_FILE_SUFFIX:tgt>
	      Suffix of	the tgt	filename (extension such as .so	or .exe).

	      See also the SUFFIX target property.

	      Note that	tgt is not added as a dependency of  the  target  this
	      expression is evaluated on.

       $<TARGET_FILE_NAME:tgt>
	      The tgt filename.

	      Note  that  tgt  is not added as a dependency of the target this
	      expression is evaluated on (see policy CMP0112).

       $<TARGET_FILE_DIR:tgt>
	      Directory	of the tgt binary file.

	      Note that	tgt is not added as a dependency of  the  target  this
	      expression is evaluated on (see policy CMP0112).

       $<TARGET_LINKER_FILE:tgt>
	      File  used when linking to the tgt target.  This will usually be
	      the library that tgt represents  (.a,  .lib,  .so),  but	for  a
	      shared library on	DLL platforms, it would	be the .lib import li-
	      brary associated with the	DLL.

       $<TARGET_LINKER_FILE_BASE_NAME:tgt>
	      Base name	of file	used to	link  the  target  tgt,	 i.e.	$<TAR-
	      GET_LINKER_FILE_NAME:tgt>	 without  prefix and suffix. For exam-
	      ple, if target file name is libbase.a, the base name is base.

	      See also the OUTPUT_NAME,	ARCHIVE_OUTPUT_NAME, and  LIBRARY_OUT-
	      PUT_NAME	target	properties  and	 their	configuration specific
	      variants OUTPUT_NAME_<CONFIG>, ARCHIVE_OUTPUT_NAME_<CONFIG>  and
	      LIBRARY_OUTPUT_NAME_<CONFIG>.

	      The  <CONFIG>_POSTFIX  and  DEBUG_POSTFIX	 target	properties can
	      also be considered.

	      Note that	tgt is not added as a dependency of  the  target  this
	      expression is evaluated on.

       $<TARGET_LINKER_FILE_PREFIX:tgt>
	      Prefix of	file used to link target tgt.

	      See also the PREFIX and IMPORT_PREFIX target properties.

	      Note  that  tgt  is not added as a dependency of the target this
	      expression is evaluated on.

       $<TARGET_LINKER_FILE_SUFFIX:tgt>
	      Suffix of	file used to link where	tgt is the name	of a target.

	      The suffix corresponds to	the file extension (such as  ".so"  or
	      ".lib").

	      See also the SUFFIX and IMPORT_SUFFIX target properties.

	      Note  that  tgt  is not added as a dependency of the target this
	      expression is evaluated on.

       $<TARGET_LINKER_FILE_NAME:tgt>
	      Name of file used	to link	target tgt.

	      Note that	tgt is not added as a dependency of  the  target  this
	      expression is evaluated on (see policy CMP0112).

       $<TARGET_LINKER_FILE_DIR:tgt>
	      Directory	of file	used to	link target tgt.

	      Note  that  tgt  is not added as a dependency of the target this
	      expression is evaluated on (see policy CMP0112).

       $<TARGET_SONAME_FILE:tgt>
	      File with	soname (.so.3) where tgt is the	name of	a target.

       $<TARGET_SONAME_FILE_NAME:tgt>
	      Name of file with	soname (.so.3).

	      Note that	tgt is not added as a dependency of  the  target  this
	      expression is evaluated on (see policy CMP0112).

       $<TARGET_SONAME_FILE_DIR:tgt>
	      Directory	of with	soname (.so.3).

	      Note  that  tgt  is not added as a dependency of the target this
	      expression is evaluated on (see policy CMP0112).

       $<TARGET_PDB_FILE:tgt>
	      Full path	to the linker generated	program	database  file	(.pdb)
	      where tgt	is the name of a target.

	      See also the PDB_NAME and	PDB_OUTPUT_DIRECTORY target properties
	      and their	configuration specific variants	PDB_NAME_<CONFIG>  and
	      PDB_OUTPUT_DIRECTORY_<CONFIG>.

       $<TARGET_PDB_FILE_BASE_NAME:tgt>
	      Base  name  of the linker	generated program database file	(.pdb)
	      where tgt	is the name of a target.

	      The base name corresponds	to  the	 target	 PDB  file  name  (see
	      $<TARGET_PDB_FILE_NAME:tgt>)  without prefix and suffix. For ex-
	      ample, if	target file name is base.pdb, the base name is base.

	      See also the PDB_NAME target property and	its configuration spe-
	      cific variant PDB_NAME_<CONFIG>.

	      The  <CONFIG>_POSTFIX  and  DEBUG_POSTFIX	 target	properties can
	      also be considered.

	      Note that	tgt is not added as a dependency of  the  target  this
	      expression is evaluated on.

       $<TARGET_PDB_FILE_NAME:tgt>
	      Name of the linker generated program database file (.pdb).

	      Note  that  tgt  is not added as a dependency of the target this
	      expression is evaluated on (see policy CMP0112).

       $<TARGET_PDB_FILE_DIR:tgt>
	      Directory	of the linker generated	program	database file (.pdb).

	      Note that	tgt is not added as a dependency of  the  target  this
	      expression is evaluated on (see policy CMP0112).

       $<TARGET_BUNDLE_DIR:tgt>
	      Full  path  to  the  bundle  directory (my.app, my.framework, or
	      my.bundle) where tgt is the name of a target.

	      Note that	tgt is not added as a dependency of  the  target  this
	      expression is evaluated on (see policy CMP0112).

       $<TARGET_BUNDLE_CONTENT_DIR:tgt>
	      Full  path to the	bundle content directory where tgt is the name
	      of a target. For the macOS  SDK  it  leads  to  my.app/Contents,
	      my.framework,  or	 my.bundle/Contents.  For all other SDKs (e.g.
	      iOS) it leads to my.app, my.framework, or	my.bundle due  to  the
	      flat bundle structure.

	      Note  that  tgt  is not added as a dependency of the target this
	      expression is evaluated on (see policy CMP0112).

       $<TARGET_PROPERTY:tgt,prop>
	      Value of the property prop on the	target tgt.

	      Note that	tgt is not added as a dependency of  the  target  this
	      expression is evaluated on.

       $<TARGET_PROPERTY:prop>
	      Value  of	 the property prop on the target for which the expres-
	      sion is being evaluated. Note that for generator expressions  in
	      Target  Usage  Requirements  this	is the consuming target	rather
	      than the target specifying the requirement.

       $<INSTALL_PREFIX>
	      Content of the install prefix when the target  is	 exported  via
	      install(EXPORT),	or  when  evaluated  in	 INSTALL_NAME_DIR, and
	      empty otherwise.

   Output-Related Expressions
       $<TARGET_NAME:...>
	      Marks ...	as being the name of a target.	This  is  required  if
	      exporting	 targets  to  multiple dependent export	sets.  The ...
	      must be a	literal	name of	a target- it may not contain generator
	      expressions.

       $<LINK_ONLY:...>
	      Content  of  ... except when evaluated in	a link interface while
	      propagating Target Usage Requirements, in	which case it  is  the
	      empty  string.   Intended	 for use only in an INTERFACE_LINK_LI-
	      BRARIES target property, perhaps via the target_link_libraries()
	      command,	to specify private link	dependencies without other us-
	      age requirements.

       $<INSTALL_INTERFACE:...>
	      Content of ... when the property is exported  using  install(EX-
	      PORT), and empty otherwise.

       $<BUILD_INTERFACE:...>
	      Content  of ... when the property	is exported using export(), or
	      when the target is used by another target	in the same  buildsys-
	      tem. Expands to the empty	string otherwise.

       $<MAKE_C_IDENTIFIER:...>
	      Content of ... converted to a C identifier.  The conversion fol-
	      lows the same behavior as	string(MAKE_C_IDENTIFIER).

       $<TARGET_OBJECTS:objLib>
	      List of objects resulting	from build of objLib.

       $<SHELL_PATH:...>
	      Content of ... converted	to  shell  path	 style.	 For  example,
	      slashes are converted to backslashes in Windows shells and drive
	      letters are converted to posix paths in  MSYS  shells.  The  ...
	      must  be an absolute path.  The ... may be a semicolon-separated
	      list of paths, in	which case each	path is	converted individually
	      and a result list	is generated using the shell path separator (:
	      on POSIX and ; on	Windows).  Be sure  to	enclose	 the  argument
	      containing  this	genex in double	quotes in CMake	source code so
	      that ; does not split arguments.

DEBUGGING
       Since generator expressions are	evaluated  during  generation  of  the
       buildsystem,  and  not during processing	of CMakeLists.txt files, it is
       not possible to inspect their result with the message() command.

       One possible way	to generate debug messages is to add a custom target,

	  add_custom_target(genexdebug COMMAND ${CMAKE_COMMAND}	-E echo	"$<...>")

       The shell command make genexdebug (invoked after	 execution  of	cmake)
       would then print	the result of $<...>.

       Another way is to write debug messages to a file:

	  file(GENERATE	OUTPUT filename	CONTENT	"$<...>")

COPYRIGHT
       2000-2020 Kitware, Inc. and Contributors

3.19.2				 Feb 28, 2021	CMAKE-GENERATOR-EXPRESSIONS(7)

NAME | INTRODUCTION | BOOLEAN GENERATOR EXPRESSIONS | STRING-VALUED GENERATOR EXPRESSIONS | DEBUGGING | COPYRIGHT

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