How do I see a C/C++ source file after preprocessing in Visual Studio?

Most compilers have an option to just run the preprocessor. e.g., gcc provides -E:

   -E  Stop after the preprocessing stage; do not run the compiler proper.  
       The output is in the form of preprocessed source code, which is sent
       to the standard output.

So you can just run:

gcc -E foo.c

If you can't find such an option, you can also just find the C preprocessor on your machine. It's usually called cpp and is probably already in your path. Invoke it like this:

cpp foo.c

If there are headers you need to include from other directories , you can pass -I/path/to/include/dir to either of these, just as you would with a regular compile.

For Windows, I'll leave it to other posters to provide answers as I'm no expert there.


cl.exe, the command line interface to Microsoft Visual C++, has three different options for outputting the preprocessed file (hence the inconsistency in the previous responses about Visual C++):

  • /E: preprocess to stdout (similar to GCC's -E option)
  • /P: preprocess to file
  • /EP: preprocess to stdout without #line directives

If you want to preprocess to a file without #line directives, combine the /P and /EP options.