So this is a simplified preprocessor metaprogram, trying to just boil down to essentials (in the hopes of finding a decent VS2012 port)...
...but the idea here is to genericise a bit what we're emitting... then you can write your entire function as a single macro, in terms of these support macros...
Your function body needs to expand for each case heterogeneously, and that's the real idea
For VS you'll need one more expansion for it to work (iirc) #define COUNT_I(_,_9,_8,_7,_6,_5,_4,_3,_2,X,...) X #define COUNT_EXPAND( X ) COUNT_I( X ) #define PP_COUNT(...) COUNT_EXPAND( COUNT_I(__VA_ARGS__,9,8,7,6,5,4,3,2,1,~) )
FOO() works just as well as a macro with one argument as zero; gnu has an extension for how to elide commas. VS also has an extension, and it works differently... the entire reason I'm putting -std=c++11 on the Coliru line despite only using the preprocessor here is because it ignores the extensions to the preprocessor
You can make a portable counter that counts 0's using a matcher technique--but then, with VS, you have to have a hack solution--I'm certainly not going to bother to shoot for that
So, yeah, probably in practice, I can beef up this type of solution and give you a sample, and it won't work for VS
Ideally you'd want to take some definition, apply it to 1 arg, then 2 args, then 3 args, and so on; each has different numbers of parameters to expand into--and it's that pattern of expansion you want to abstract out
So in the raw PP_EAPPLY macro in this prototype--the parameter (1, 2, 3, 4, 5) would be the one that varies at the high level
It's applying the PP_EAPPLY expander twice (names here are ugly but just for prototype); once to build the argument list, and the second time to build your assert calls