Provided by: cmake-data_3.24.2-1ubuntu1_all bug

NAME

       cmake-generator-expressions - CMake Generator Expressions

INTRODUCTION

       Generator  expressions are evaluated during build system generation to produce information
       specific to each build configuration.  They have the form $<...>.  For example:

          target_include_directories(tgt PRIVATE /opt/include/$<CXX_COMPILER_ID>)

       This would expand to /opt/include/GNU, /opt/include/Clang,  etc.   depending  on  the  C++
       compiler used.

       Generator  expressions  are  allowed  in  the  context  of many target properties, 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_directories(),  target_compile_definitions()  and  others.    They   enable
       conditional  linking,  conditional  definitions  used  when compiling, conditional include
       directories, and more.  The conditions may be based on  the  build  configuration,  target
       properties, platform information, or any other queryable information.

       Generator expressions can be nested:

          target_compile_definitions(tgt PRIVATE
            $<$<VERSION_LESS:$<CXX_COMPILER_VERSION>,4.2.0>:OLD_COMPILER>
          )

       The  above  would  expand  to  OLD_COMPILER if the CMAKE_CXX_COMPILER_VERSION is less than
       4.2.0.

WHITESPACE AND QUOTING

       Generator expressions are typically  parsed  after  command  arguments.   If  a  generator
       expression  contains  spaces,  new  lines,  semicolons  or  other  characters  that may be
       interpreted as command argument separators, the whole expression should be  surrounded  by
       quotes  when  passed  to  a  command.  Failure to do so may result in the expression being
       split and it may no longer be recognized as a generator expression.

       When  using  add_custom_command()   or   add_custom_target(),   use   the   VERBATIM   and
       COMMAND_EXPAND_LISTS options to obtain robust argument splitting and quoting.

          # WRONG: Embedded space will be treated as an argument separator.
          # This ends up not being seen as a generator expression at all.
          add_custom_target(run_some_tool
            COMMAND some_tool -I$<JOIN:$<TARGET_PROPERTY:tgt,INCLUDE_DIRECTORIES>, -I>
            VERBATIM
          )

          # Better, but still not robust. Quotes prevent the space from splitting the
          # expression. However, the tool will receive the expanded value as a single
          # argument.
          add_custom_target(run_some_tool
            COMMAND some_tool "-I$<JOIN:$<TARGET_PROPERTY:tgt,INCLUDE_DIRECTORIES>, -I>"
            VERBATIM
          )

          # Nearly correct. Using a semicolon to separate arguments and adding the
          # COMMAND_EXPAND_LISTS option means that paths with spaces will be handled
          # correctly. Quoting the whole expression ensures it is seen as a generator
          # expression. But if the target property is empty, we will get a bare -I
          # with nothing after it.
          add_custom_target(run_some_tool
            COMMAND some_tool "-I$<JOIN:$<TARGET_PROPERTY:tgt,INCLUDE_DIRECTORIES>,;-I>"
            COMMAND_EXPAND_LISTS
            VERBATIM
          )

       Using  variables  to  build  up  a more complex generator expression is also a good way to
       reduce errors and improve readability.  The above example can be improved further like so:

          # The $<BOOL:...> check prevents adding anything if the property is empty,
          # assuming the property value cannot be one of CMake's false constants.
          set(prop "$<TARGET_PROPERTY:tgt,INCLUDE_DIRECTORIES>")
          add_custom_target(run_some_tool
            COMMAND some_tool "$<$<BOOL:${prop}>:-I$<JOIN:${prop},;-I>>"
            COMMAND_EXPAND_LISTS
            VERBATIM
          )

       A common mistake is to try to split a generator  expression  across  multiple  lines  with
       indenting:

          # WRONG: New lines and spaces all treated as argument separators, so the
          # generator expression is split and not recognized correctly.
          target_compile_definitions(tgt PRIVATE
            $<$<AND:
                $<CXX_COMPILER_ID:GNU>,
                $<VERSION_GREATER_EQUAL:$<CXX_COMPILER_VERSION>,5>
              >:HAVE_5_OR_LATER>
          )

       Again,  use  helper  variables  with  well-chosen  names to build up a readable expression
       instead:

          set(is_gnu "$<CXX_COMPILER_ID:GNU>")
          set(v5_or_later "$<VERSION_GREATER_EQUAL:$<CXX_COMPILER_VERSION>,5>")
          set(meet_requirements "$<AND:${is_gnu},${v5_or_later}>")
          target_compile_definitions(tgt PRIVATE
            "$<${meet_requirements}:HAVE_5_OR_LATER>"
          )

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 ${CMAKE_COMMAND} -E echo "$<...>")

       After  running  cmake, you can then build the genexdebug target to print the result of the
       $<...> expression (i.e. run the command cmake --build ... --target genexdebug).

       Another way is to write debug messages to a file with file(GENERATE):

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

GENERATOR EXPRESSION REFERENCE

       NOTE:
          This reference deviates from most of the CMake documentation in that it  omits  angular
          brackets  <...>  around  placeholders  like condition, string, target, etc.  This is to
          prevent an opportunity  for  those  placeholders  to  be  misinterpreted  as  generator
          expressions.

   Conditional Expressions
       A  fundamental  category of generator expressions relates to conditional logic.  Two forms
       of conditional generator expressions are supported:

       $<condition:true_string>
              Evaluates to true_string if condition  is  1,  or  an  empty  string  if  condition
              evaluates to 0.  Any other value for condition results in an error.

       $<IF:condition,true_string,false_string>
              New in version 3.8.

              Evaluates to true_string if condition is 1, or false_string if condition is 0.  Any
              other value for condition results in an error.

       Typically, the condition is itself a generator expression.  For  instance,  the  following
       expression  expands  to  DEBUG_MODE  when  the  Debug configuration is used, and the empty
       string for all other configurations:

          $<$<CONFIG:Debug>:DEBUG_MODE>

       Boolean-like condition values other than 1 or 0 can be handled by wrapping them  with  the
       $<BOOL:...> generator expression:

       $<BOOL:string>
              Converts string to 0 or 1. Evaluates to 0 if any of the following is true:

              • string is empty,

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

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

              Otherwise evaluates to 1.

       The $<BOOL:...> generator expression is often used when a condition is provided by a CMake
       variable:

          $<$<BOOL:${HAVE_SOME_FEATURE}>:-DENABLE_SOME_FEATURE>

   Logical Operators
       The common boolean logic operators are supported:

       $<AND:conditions>
              where  conditions  is  a  comma-separated list of boolean expressions, all of which
              must evaluate to either 1 or 0.   The  whole  expression  evaluates  to  1  if  all
              conditions are 1.  If any condition is 0, the whole expression evaluates to 0.

       $<OR:conditions>
              where  conditions  is  a comma-separated list of boolean expressions.  all of which
              must evaluate to either 1 or 0.  The whole expression evaluates to 1  if  at  least
              one  of the conditions is 1.  If all conditions evaluate to 0, the whole expression
              evaluates to 0.

       $<NOT:condition>
              condition must be 0 or 1.  The result of the expression is 0  if  condition  is  1,
              else 1.

   Primary Comparison Expressions
       CMake  supports  a  variety  of  generator  expressions that compare things.  This section
       covers the primary and most widely used comparison types.  Other more specific  comparison
       types are documented in their own separate sections further below.

   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.   For  example,  the  following evaluates to 1 if ${foo} is any of BAR,
              Bar, bar, etc.

                 $<STREQUAL:$<UPPER_CASE:${foo}>,BAR>

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

   Version 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>
              New in version 3.7.

              1 if v1 is a version less than or equal to v2, else 0.

       $<VERSION_GREATER_EQUAL:v1,v2>
              New in version 3.7.

              1 if v1 is a version greater than or equal to v2, else 0.

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

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

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

   List Expressions
       $<IN_LIST:string,list>
              New in version 3.12.

              1  if  string  is  an  item  in  the  semicolon-separated  list,  else  0.  It uses
              case-sensitive comparisons.

       $<JOIN:list,string>
              Joins the list with the content of string inserted between each item.

       $<REMOVE_DUPLICATES:list>
              New in version 3.15.

              Removes duplicated items in  the  given  list.  The  relative  order  of  items  is
              preserved, but if duplicates are encountered, only the first instance is preserved.

       $<FILTER:list,INCLUDE|EXCLUDE,regex>
              New in version 3.15.

              Includes or removes items from list that match the regular expression regex.

   Path Expressions
       Most  of  the  expressions  in  this  section are closely associated with the cmake_path()
       command, providing the same capabilities, but in the form of a generator expression.

       For all generator expressions in this section, paths are expected  to  be  in  cmake-style
       format.  The  $<PATH:CMAKE_PATH> generator expression can be used to convert a native path
       to a cmake-style one.

   Path Comparisons
       $<PATH_EQUAL:path1,path2>
              New in version 3.24.

              Compares the lexical representations of two paths. No normalization is performed on
              either path. Returns 1 if the paths are equal, 0 otherwise.

              See cmake_path(COMPARE) for more details.

   Path Queries
       These expressions provide the generation-time capabilities equivalent to the Query options
       of the cmake_path() command.  All paths are expected to be in cmake-style format.

       $<PATH:HAS_*,path>
              New in version 3.24.

              The following operations return 1 if the particular path component  is  present,  0
              otherwise.  See  Path  Structure  And  Terminology  for  the  meaning  of each path
              component.

                 $<PATH:HAS_ROOT_NAME,path>
                 $<PATH:HAS_ROOT_DIRECTORY,path>
                 $<PATH:HAS_ROOT_PATH,path>
                 $<PATH:HAS_FILENAME,path>
                 $<PATH:HAS_EXTENSION,path>
                 $<PATH:HAS_STEM,path>
                 $<PATH:HAS_RELATIVE_PART,path>
                 $<PATH:HAS_PARENT_PATH,path>

              Note the following special cases:

              • For HAS_ROOT_PATH, a true result will  only  be  returned  if  at  least  one  of
                root-name or root-directory is non-empty.

              • For  HAS_PARENT_PATH,  the  root  directory  is also considered to have a parent,
                which will be itself.  The result is true except if the path consists of  just  a
                filename.

       $<PATH:IS_ABSOLUTE,path>
              New in version 3.24.

              Returns 1 if the path is absolute, 0 otherwise.

       $<PATH:IS_RELATIVE,path>
              New in version 3.24.

              This will return the opposite of IS_ABSOLUTE.

       $<PATH:IS_PREFIX[,NORMALIZE],path,input>
              New in version 3.24.

              Returns 1 if path is the prefix of input, 0 otherwise.

              When  the  NORMALIZE  option is specified, path and input are normalized before the
              check.

   Path Decomposition
       These expressions provide the generation-time capabilities equivalent to the Decomposition
       options of the cmake_path() command.  All paths are expected to be in cmake-style format.

       $<PATH:GET_*,...>
              New in version 3.24.

              The following operations retrieve a different component or group of components from
              a path. See Path Structure And Terminology for the meaning of each path component.

                 $<PATH:GET_ROOT_NAME,path>
                 $<PATH:GET_ROOT_DIRECTORY,path>
                 $<PATH:GET_ROOT_PATH,path>
                 $<PATH:GET_FILENAME,path>
                 $<PATH:GET_EXTENSION[,LAST_ONLY],path>
                 $<PATH:GET_STEM[,LAST_ONLY],path>
                 $<PATH:GET_RELATIVE_PART,path>
                 $<PATH:GET_PARENT_PATH,path>

              If a requested component is not present in the path, an empty string is returned.

   Path Transformations
       These expressions provide the generation-time capabilities equivalent to the  Modification
       and  Generation  options  of  the  cmake_path()  command.  All paths are expected to be in
       cmake-style format.

       $<PATH:CMAKE_PATH[,NORMALIZE],path>
              New in version 3.24.

              Returns path. If path is a native path, it is converted  into  a  cmake-style  path
              with  forward-slashes  (/).  On  Windows,  the  long  filename marker is taken into
              account.

              When  the  NORMALIZE  option  is  specified,  the  path  is  normalized  after  the
              conversion.

       $<PATH:APPEND,path,input,...>
              New in version 3.24.

              Returns   all   the   input   arguments   appended   to   path   using   /  as  the
              directory-separator. Depending on the input, the value of path may be discarded.

              See cmake_path(APPEND) for more details.

       $<PATH:REMOVE_FILENAME,path>
              New in version 3.24.

              Returns path with filename component (as returned by $<PATH:GET_FILENAME>) removed.
              After removal, any trailing directory-separator is left alone, if present.

              See cmake_path(REMOVE_FILENAME) for more details.

       $<PATH:REPLACE_FILENAME,path,input>
              New in version 3.24.

              Returns path with the filename component replaced by input. If path has no filename
              component (i.e. $<PATH:HAS_FILENAME> returns 0), path is unchanged.

              See cmake_path(REPLACE_FILENAME) for more details.

       $<PATH:REMOVE_EXTENSION[,LAST_ONLY],path>
              New in version 3.24.

              Returns path with the extension removed, if any.

              See cmake_path(REMOVE_EXTENSION) for more details.

       $<PATH:REPLACE_EXTENSION[,LAST_ONLY],path,input>
              New in version 3.24.

              Returns path with the extension replaced by input, if any.

              See cmake_path(REPLACE_EXTENSION) for more details.

       $<PATH:NORMAL_PATH,path>
              New in version 3.24.

              Returns path normalized according to the steps described in Normalization.

       $<PATH:RELATIVE_PATH,path,base_directory>
              New in version 3.24.

              Returns path, modified to make it relative to the base_directory argument.

              See cmake_path(RELATIVE_PATH) for more details.

       $<PATH:ABSOLUTE_PATH[,NORMALIZE],path,base_directory>
              New in version 3.24.

              Returns path as absolute. If path is a relative path  ($<PATH:IS_RELATIVE>  returns
              1),   it   is   evaluated  relative  to  the  given  base  directory  specified  by
              base_directory argument.

              When the NORMALIZE option is specified, the  path  is  normalized  after  the  path
              computation.

              See cmake_path(ABSOLUTE_PATH) for more details.

   Shell Paths
       $<SHELL_PATH:...>
              New in version 3.4.

              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.

              New  in  version 3.14: 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.

   Configuration Expressions
       $<CONFIG>
              Configuration  name.  Use  this  instead  of the deprecated CONFIGURATION generator
              expression.

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

       $<OUTPUT_CONFIG:...>
              New in version 3.20.

              Only  valid  in  add_custom_command()  and  add_custom_target()  as  the outer-most
              generator expression in  an  argument.   With  the  Ninja  Multi-Config  generator,
              generator  expressions  in  ...  are  evaluated  using the custom command's "output
              config".  With other generators, the content of ... is evaluated normally.

       $<COMMAND_CONFIG:...>
              New in version 3.20.

              Only valid  in  add_custom_command()  and  add_custom_target()  as  the  outer-most
              generator  expression  in  an  argument.   With  the  Ninja Multi-Config generator,
              generator expressions in ... are evaluated  using  the  custom  command's  "command
              config".  With other generators, the content of ... is evaluated normally.

   Toolchain And Language Expressions
   Platform
       $<PLATFORM_ID>
              The current system's CMake platform id.  See also the CMAKE_SYSTEM_NAME variable.

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

   Compiler Version
       See  also  the  CMAKE_<LANG>_COMPILER_VERSION  variable,  which  is closely related to the
       expressions in this sub-section.

       $<C_COMPILER_VERSION>
              The version of the C compiler used.

       $<C_COMPILER_VERSION:version>
              1 if the version of the C compiler matches version, otherwise 0.

       $<CXX_COMPILER_VERSION>
              The version of the CXX compiler used.

       $<CXX_COMPILER_VERSION:version>
              1 if the version of the CXX compiler matches version, otherwise 0.

       $<CUDA_COMPILER_VERSION>
              New in version 3.15.

              The version of the CUDA compiler used.

       $<CUDA_COMPILER_VERSION:version>
              New in version 3.15.

              1 if the version of the CXX compiler matches version, otherwise 0.

       $<OBJC_COMPILER_VERSION>
              New in version 3.16.

              The version of the OBJC compiler used.

       $<OBJC_COMPILER_VERSION:version>
              New in version 3.16.

              1 if the version of the OBJC compiler matches version, otherwise 0.

       $<OBJCXX_COMPILER_VERSION>
              New in version 3.16.

              The version of the OBJCXX compiler used.

       $<OBJCXX_COMPILER_VERSION:version>
              New in version 3.16.

              1 if the version of the OBJCXX compiler matches version, otherwise 0.

       $<Fortran_COMPILER_VERSION>
              The version of the Fortran compiler used.

       $<Fortran_COMPILER_VERSION:version>
              1 if the version of the Fortran compiler matches version, otherwise 0.

       $<HIP_COMPILER_VERSION>
              New in version 3.21.

              The version of the HIP compiler used.

       $<HIP_COMPILER_VERSION:version>
              New in version 3.21.

              1 if the version of the HIP compiler matches version, otherwise 0.

       $<ISPC_COMPILER_VERSION>
              New in version 3.19.

              The version of the ISPC compiler used.

       $<ISPC_COMPILER_VERSION:version>
              New in version 3.19.

              1 if the version of the ISPC compiler matches version, otherwise 0.

   Compiler Language And ID
       See also the CMAKE_<LANG>_COMPILER_ID variable, which is closely related to  most  of  the
       expressions in this sub-section.

       $<C_COMPILER_ID>
              CMake's compiler id of the C compiler used.

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

       $<CXX_COMPILER_ID>
              CMake's compiler id of the CXX compiler used.

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

       $<CUDA_COMPILER_ID>
              New in version 3.15.

              CMake's compiler id of the CUDA compiler used.

       $<CUDA_COMPILER_ID:compiler_ids>
              New in version 3.15.

              where compiler_ids is a comma-separated list.  1 if CMake's compiler id of the CUDA
              compiler matches any one of the entries in compiler_ids, otherwise 0.

       $<OBJC_COMPILER_ID>
              New in version 3.16.

              CMake's compiler id of the OBJC compiler used.

       $<OBJC_COMPILER_ID:compiler_ids>
              New in version 3.16.

              where compiler_ids is a comma-separated list.  1 if  CMake's  compiler  id  of  the
              Objective-C compiler matches any one of the entries in compiler_ids, otherwise 0.

       $<OBJCXX_COMPILER_ID>
              New in version 3.16.

              CMake's compiler id of the OBJCXX compiler used.

       $<OBJCXX_COMPILER_ID:compiler_ids>
              New in version 3.16.

              where  compiler_ids  is  a  comma-separated  list.  1 if CMake's compiler id of the
              Objective-C++ compiler matches any one of the entries in compiler_ids, otherwise 0.

       $<Fortran_COMPILER_ID>
              CMake's compiler id of the Fortran compiler used.

       $<Fortran_COMPILER_ID:compiler_ids>
              where compiler_ids is a comma-separated list.  1 if  CMake's  compiler  id  of  the
              Fortran compiler matches any one of the entries in compiler_ids, otherwise 0.

       $<HIP_COMPILER_ID>
              New in version 3.21.

              CMake's compiler id of the HIP compiler used.

       $<HIP_COMPILER_ID:compiler_ids>
              New in version 3.21.

              where  compiler_ids is a comma-separated list.  1 if CMake's compiler id of the HIP
              compiler matches any one of the entries in compiler_ids, otherwise 0.

       $<ISPC_COMPILER_ID>
              New in version 3.19.

              CMake's compiler id of the ISPC compiler used.

       $<ISPC_COMPILER_ID:compiler_ids>
              New in version 3.19.

              where compiler_ids is a comma-separated list.  1 if CMake's compiler id of the ISPC
              compiler matches any one of the entries in compiler_ids, otherwise 0.

       $<COMPILE_LANGUAGE>
              New in version 3.3.

              The  compile  language  of  source  files when evaluating compile options.  See the
              related  boolean  expression  $<COMPILE_LANGUAGE:language>  for  notes  about   the
              portability of this generator expression.

       $<COMPILE_LANGUAGE:languages>
              New in version 3.3.

              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  directories  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  directory  for C++ only (compiler id checks
              elided).  It also specifies 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 directories 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,
              expressions for both C and C++ sources will be evaluated using CXX if there are any
              C++  sources  and  otherwise using C.  A workaround is to create separate libraries
              for each source file language 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)

       $<COMPILE_LANG_AND_ID:language,compiler_ids>
              New in version 3.15.

              1 when the language used for compilation unit matches language and 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:language>  and $<LANG_COMPILER_ID:compiler_ids>. This expression
              may  be  used  to  specify  compile  options,  compile  definitions,  and   include
              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 Features
       $<COMPILE_FEATURES:features>
              New in version 3.1.

              where  features  is  a comma-separated list.  Evaluates to 1 if all of the features
              are available for the 'head' target, and 0 otherwise. If this  expression  is  used
              while  evaluating  the  link  implementation  of  a  target  and  if any dependency
              transitively increases 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 supported compilers.

   Linker Language And ID
       $<LINK_LANGUAGE>
              New in version 3.18.

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

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

       $<LINK_LANGUAGE:languages>
              New in version 3.18.

              1  when  the  language  used for link step matches any of the entries 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_LANGUAGE:..>  expressions  will  always  return  0.   The  link  language
                 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
                 complete 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, unexpectedly,  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.

       $<LINK_LANG_AND_ID:language,compiler_ids>
              New in version 3.18.

              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 constraints about the usage
              of this generator expression.

   Link Features
       $<LINK_LIBRARY:feature,library-list>
              New in version 3.24.

              Specify a set of libraries to link to a target, along with a feature which provides
              details about how they should be linked.  For example:

                 add_library(lib1 STATIC ...)
                 add_library(lib2 ...)
                 target_link_libraries(lib2 PRIVATE "$<LINK_LIBRARY:WHOLE_ARCHIVE,lib1>")

              This specifies that lib2 should link to lib1 and use the WHOLE_ARCHIVE feature when
              doing so.

              Feature names  are  case-sensitive  and  may  only  contain  letters,  numbers  and
              underscores.   Feature  names defined in all uppercase are reserved for CMake's own
              built-in features.  The pre-defined built-in library features are:

              DEFAULT
                     This feature corresponds to  standard  linking,  essentially  equivalent  to
                     using   no   feature   at   all.    It  is  typically  only  used  with  the
                     LINK_LIBRARY_OVERRIDE and LINK_LIBRARY_OVERRIDE_<LIBRARY> target properties.

              WHOLE_ARCHIVE
                     Force inclusion of all members of a static library.  This  feature  is  only
                     supported for the following platforms, with limitations as noted:

                     • Linux.

                     • All BSD variants.

                     • SunOS.

                     • All Apple variants.  The library must be specified as a CMake target name,
                       a library file name (such as libfoo.a), or a library file  path  (such  as
                       /path/to/libfoo.a).  Due to a limitation of the Apple linker, it cannot be
                       specified as a plain library name like foo,  where  foo  is  not  a  CMake
                       target.

                     • Windows.   When using a MSVC or MSVC-like toolchain, the MSVC version must
                       be greater than 1900.

                     • Cygwin.

                     • MSYS.

              FRAMEWORK
                     This option tells the linker to search for the specified framework using the
                     -framework  linker option.  It can only be used on Apple platforms, and only
                     with a linker that understands the option used  (i.e.  the  linker  provided
                     with Xcode, or one compatible with it).

                     The framework can be specified as a CMake framework target, a bare framework
                     name, or a file path.  If a target is  given,  that  target  must  have  the
                     FRAMEWORK  target  property  set to true.  For a file path, if it contains a
                     directory part, that directory will be added as a framework search path.

                        add_library(lib SHARED ...)
                        target_link_libraries(lib PRIVATE "$<LINK_LIBRARY:FRAMEWORK,/path/to/my_framework>")

                        # The constructed linker command line will contain:
                        #   -F/path/to -framework my_framework

                     File paths must conform to one of the following patterns (* is  a  wildcard,
                     and optional parts are shown as [...]):

                        • [/path/to/]FwName[.framework][/path/to/]FwName.framework/FwName[/path/to/]FwName.framework/Versions/*/FwName

                     Note that CMake recognizes and automatically handles framework targets, even
                     without using the $<LINK_LIBRARY:FRAMEWORK,...> expression.   The  generator
                     expression  can still be used with a CMake target if the project wants to be
                     explicit about it, but it is not required to do so.  The linker command line
                     may have some differences between using the generator expression or not, but
                     the final result should be the same.  On the other hand, if a file  path  is
                     given,  CMake  will  recognize  some paths automatically, but not all cases.
                     The project may want to use $<LINK_LIBRARY:FRAMEWORK,...> for file paths  so
                     that the expected behavior is clear.

              NEEDED_FRAMEWORK
                     This  is  similar  to  the FRAMEWORK feature, except it forces the linker to
                     link with the framework even if no symbols are used from it.   It  uses  the
                     -needed_framework option and has the same linker constraints as FRAMEWORK.

              REEXPORT_FRAMEWORK
                     This  is  similar  to the FRAMEWORK feature, except it tells the linker that
                     the framework should be available to clients linking to  the  library  being
                     created.   It  uses  the  -reexport_framework option and has the same linker
                     constraints as FRAMEWORK.

              WEAK_FRAMEWORK
                     This is similar to the FRAMEWORK feature, except it  forces  the  linker  to
                     mark  the  framework  and all references to it as weak imports.  It uses the
                     -weak_framework option and has the same linker constraints as FRAMEWORK.

              NEEDED_LIBRARY
                     This is similar to the NEEDED_FRAMEWORK feature, except it is for  use  with
                     non-framework  targets  or  libraries  (Apple  platforms only).  It uses the
                     -needed_library or -needed-l option as appropriate, and has the same  linker
                     constraints as NEEDED_FRAMEWORK.

              REEXPORT_LIBRARY
                     This  is  similar  to  the REEXPORT_FRAMEWORK feature,  except it is for use
                     with non-framework targets or libraries (Apple platforms only).  It uses the
                     -reexport_library  or  -reexport-l  option  as appropriate, and has the same
                     linker constraints as REEXPORT_FRAMEWORK.

              WEAK_LIBRARY
                     This is similar to the WEAK_FRAMEWORK feature, except it  is  for  use  with
                     non-framework  targets  or  libraries  (Apple  platforms only).  It uses the
                     -weak_library or -weak-l option as appropriate,  and  has  the  same  linker
                     constraints as WEAK_FRAMEWORK.

              Built-in  and  custom  library  features  are  defined  in  terms  of the following
              variables:

              • CMAKE_<LANG>_LINK_LIBRARY_USING_<FEATURE>_SUPPORTEDCMAKE_<LANG>_LINK_LIBRARY_USING_<FEATURE>CMAKE_LINK_LIBRARY_USING_<FEATURE>_SUPPORTEDCMAKE_LINK_LIBRARY_USING_<FEATURE>

              The value used for each of these variables is the value as set at the  end  of  the
              directory scope in which the target was created.  The usage is as follows:

              1. If   the  language-specific  CMAKE_<LANG>_LINK_LIBRARY_USING_<FEATURE>_SUPPORTED
                 variable  is  true,  the  feature  must  be   defined   by   the   corresponding
                 CMAKE_<LANG>_LINK_LIBRARY_USING_<FEATURE> variable.

              2. If     no     language-specific     feature     is     supported,    then    the
                 CMAKE_LINK_LIBRARY_USING_<FEATURE>_SUPPORTED  variable  must  be  true  and  the
                 feature  must be defined by the corresponding CMAKE_LINK_LIBRARY_USING_<FEATURE>
                 variable.

              The following limitations should be noted:

              • The library-list can specify CMake targets or libraries.   Any  CMake  target  of
                type  OBJECT  or  INTERFACE  will ignore the feature aspect of the expression and
                instead be linked in the standard way.

              • The $<LINK_LIBRARY:...> generator expression can only be  used  to  specify  link
                libraries.   In  practice,  this  means  it  can  appear  in  the LINK_LIBRARIES,
                INTERFACE_LINK_LIBRARIES, and INTERFACE_LINK_LIBRARIES_DIRECT  target properties,
                and be specified in target_link_libraries() and link_libraries() commands.

              • If    a    $<LINK_LIBRARY:...>    generator    expression    appears    in    the
                INTERFACE_LINK_LIBRARIES property of  a  target,  it  will  be  included  in  the
                imported target generated by a install(EXPORT) command.  It is the responsibility
                of the environment consuming this import to define the link feature used by  this
                expression.

              • Each  target or library involved in the link step must have at most only one kind
                of library feature.  The absence of a feature is also incompatible with all other
                features.  For example:

                   add_library(lib1 ...)
                   add_library(lib2 ...)
                   add_library(lib3 ...)

                   # lib1 will be associated with feature1
                   target_link_libraries(lib2 PUBLIC "$<LINK_LIBRARY:feature1,lib1>")

                   # lib1 is being linked with no feature here. This conflicts with the
                   # use of feature1 in the line above and would result in an error.
                   target_link_libraries(lib3 PRIVATE lib1 lib2)

                Where  it  isn't  possible to use the same feature throughout a build for a given
                target or library, the LINK_LIBRARY_OVERRIDE and  LINK_LIBRARY_OVERRIDE_<LIBRARY>
                target properties can be used to resolve such incompatibilities.

              • The  $<LINK_LIBRARY:...> generator expression does not guarantee that the list of
                specified targets and  libraries  will  be  kept  grouped  together.   To  manage
                constructs like --start-group and --end-group, as supported by the GNU ld linker,
                use the LINK_GROUP generator expression instead.

       $<LINK_GROUP:feature,library-list>
              New in version 3.24.

              Specify a group of libraries to link to  a  target,  along  with  a  feature  which
              defines how that group should be linked.  For example:

                 add_library(lib1 STATIC ...)
                 add_library(lib2 ...)
                 target_link_libraries(lib2 PRIVATE "$<LINK_GROUP:RESCAN,lib1,external>")

              This  specifies  that lib2 should link to lib1 and external, and that both of those
              two libraries should be included on  the  linker  command  line  according  to  the
              definition of the RESCAN feature.

              Feature  names  are  case-sensitive  and  may  only  contain  letters,  numbers and
              underscores.  Feature names defined in all uppercase are reserved for  CMake's  own
              built-in  features.   Currently,  there  is  only  one  pre-defined  built-in group
              feature:

              RESCAN Some linkers are single-pass only.  For such  linkers,  circular  references
                     between  libraries  typically  result  in  unresolved symbols.  This feature
                     instructs the linker to search the  specified  static  libraries  repeatedly
                     until no new undefined references are created.

                     Normally,  a  static  library  is searched only once in the order that it is
                     specified on the command line.  If a symbol in that  library  is  needed  to
                     resolve  an  undefined  symbol  referred  to  by an object in a library that
                     appears later on the command line, the linker would not be able  to  resolve
                     that  reference.   By grouping the static libraries with the RESCAN feature,
                     they will all be searched  repeatedly  until  all  possible  references  are
                     resolved.   This will use linker options like --start-group and --end-group,
                     or on SunOS, -z rescan-start and -z rescan-end.

                     Using this feature has a significant performance cost. It is best to use  it
                     only  when  there  are  unavoidable  circular references between two or more
                     static libraries.

                     This feature is available when using toolchains that target Linux, BSD,  and
                     SunOS.   It  can  also  be  used when targeting Windows platforms if the GNU
                     toolchain is used.

              Built-in and custom group features are defined in terms of the following variables:

              • CMAKE_<LANG>_LINK_GROUP_USING_<FEATURE>_SUPPORTEDCMAKE_<LANG>_LINK_GROUP_USING_<FEATURE>CMAKE_LINK_GROUP_USING_<FEATURE>_SUPPORTEDCMAKE_LINK_GROUP_USING_<FEATURE>

              The value used for each of these variables is the value as set at the  end  of  the
              directory scope in which the target was created.  The usage is as follows:

              1. If   the   language-specific   CMAKE_<LANG>_LINK_GROUP_USING_<FEATURE>_SUPPORTED
                 variable  is  true,  the  feature  must  be   defined   by   the   corresponding
                 CMAKE_<LANG>_LINK_GROUP_USING_<FEATURE> variable.

              2. If     no     language-specific     feature     is     supported,    then    the
                 CMAKE_LINK_GROUP_USING_<FEATURE>_SUPPORTED variable must be true and the feature
                 must be defined by the corresponding CMAKE_LINK_GROUP_USING_<FEATURE> variable.

              The  LINK_GROUP  generator expression is compatible with the LINK_LIBRARY generator
              expression.  The  libraries  involved  in  a  group  can  be  specified  using  the
              LINK_LIBRARY generator expression.

              Each  target or external library involved in the link step is allowed to be part of
              multiple groups, but only if all the groups  involved  specify  the  same  feature.
              Such  groups  will  not be merged on the linker command line, the individual groups
              will still be preserved.  Mixing different group features for the  same  target  or
              library is forbidden.

                 add_library(lib1 ...)
                 add_library(lib2 ...)
                 add_library(lib3 ...)
                 add_library(lib4 ...)
                 add_library(lib5 ...)

                 target_link_libraries(lib3 PUBLIC  "$<LINK_GROUP:feature1,lib1,lib2>")
                 target_link_libraries(lib4 PRIVATE "$<LINK_GROUP:feature1,lib1,lib3>")
                 # lib4 will be linked with the groups {lib1,lib2} and {lib1,lib3}.
                 # Both groups specify the same feature, so this is fine.

                 target_link_libraries(lib5 PRIVATE "$<LINK_GROUP:feature2,lib1,lib3>")
                 # An error will be raised here because both lib1 and lib3 are part of two
                 # groups with different features.

              When  a  target  or  an  external library is involved in the link step as part of a
              group and also as not part of any group, any occurrence of the non-group link  item
              will be replaced by the groups it belongs to.

                 add_library(lib1 ...)
                 add_library(lib2 ...)
                 add_library(lib3 ...)
                 add_library(lib4 ...)

                 target_link_libraries(lib3 PUBLIC lib1)

                 target_link_libraries(lib4 PRIVATE lib3 "$<LINK_GROUP:feature1,lib1,lib2>")
                 # lib4 will only be linked with lib3 and the group {lib1,lib2}

              Because  lib1  is  part of the group defined for lib4, that group then gets applied
              back to the use of lib1 for lib3.  The end result will be  as  though  the  linking
              relationship for lib3 had been specified as:

                 target_link_libraries(lib3 PUBLIC "$<LINK_GROUP:feature1,lib1,lib2>")

              Be  aware  that the precedence of the group over the non-group link item can result
              in circular dependencies between groups.  If this occurs, a fatal error  is  raised
              because circular dependencies are not allowed for groups.

                 add_library(lib1A ...)
                 add_library(lib1B ...)
                 add_library(lib2A ...)
                 add_library(lib2B ...)
                 add_library(lib3 ...)

                 # Non-group linking relationships, these are non-circular so far
                 target_link_libraries(lib1A PUBLIC lib2A)
                 target_link_libraries(lib2B PUBLIC lib1B)

                 # The addition of these groups creates circular dependencies
                 target_link_libraries(lib3 PRIVATE
                   "$<LINK_GROUP:feat,lib1A,lib1B>"
                   "$<LINK_GROUP:feat,lib2A,lib2B>"
                 )

              Because  of  the  groups  defined for lib3, the linking relationships for lib1A and
              lib2B effectively get expanded to the equivalent of:

                 target_link_libraries(lib1A PUBLIC "$<LINK_GROUP:feat,lib2A,lib2B>")
                 target_link_libraries(lib2B PUBLIC "$<LINK_GROUP:feat,lib1A,lib1B>")

              This creates a circular dependency between groups: lib1A --> lib2B --> lib1A.

              The following limitations should also be noted:

              • The library-list can specify CMake targets or libraries.   Any  CMake  target  of
                type  OBJECT  or  INTERFACE  will ignore the feature aspect of the expression and
                instead be linked in the standard way.

              • The $<LINK_GROUP:...> generator expression can  only  be  used  to  specify  link
                libraries.   In  practice,  this  means  it  can  appear  in  the LINK_LIBRARIES,
                INTERFACE_LINK_LIBRARIES,and INTERFACE_LINK_LIBRARIES_DIRECT  target  properties,
                and be specified in target_link_libraries() and link_libraries() commands.

              • If     a     $<LINK_GROUP:...>    generator    expression    appears    in    the
                INTERFACE_LINK_LIBRARIES property of  a  target,  it  will  be  included  in  the
                imported target generated by a install(EXPORT) command.  It is the responsibility
                of the environment consuming this import to define the link feature used by  this
                expression.

   Link Context
       $<LINK_ONLY:...>
              New in version 3.1.

              Content  of  ...,  except  while collecting Transitive Usage Requirements, in which
              case  it   is   the   empty   string.    This   is   intended   for   use   in   an
              INTERFACE_LINK_LIBRARIES    target    property,   typically   populated   via   the
              target_link_libraries() command, to specify private link dependencies without other
              usage requirements.

              New  in  version  3.24:  LINK_ONLY  may  also  be  used  in a LINK_LIBRARIES target
              property.  See policy CMP0131.

       $<DEVICE_LINK:list>
              New in version 3.18.

              Returns the list if it is the device link  step,  an  empty  list  otherwise.   The
              device    link    step    is    controlled    by   CUDA_SEPARABLE_COMPILATION   and
              CUDA_RESOLVE_DEVICE_SYMBOLS properties and policy CMP0105. This expression can only
              be used to specify link options.

       $<HOST_LINK:list>
              New in version 3.18.

              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  expression).  This  expression  can only be used to
              specify link options.

   Target-Dependent Expressions
       These queries refer to a target tgt. Unless otherwise stated,  this  can  be  any  runtime
       artifact, namely:

       • An executable target created by add_executable().

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

       • A static library target created by add_library().

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

       $<TARGET_EXISTS:tgt>
              New in version 3.12.

              1 if tgt exists as a CMake target, else 0.

       $<TARGET_NAME_IF_EXISTS:tgt>
              New in version 3.12.

              The target name tgt if the target exists, an empty string otherwise.

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

       $<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.

       $<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  expression  is  being
              evaluated.  Note  that  for  generator expressions in Transitive Usage Requirements
              this is the consuming target rather than the target specifying the requirement.

       $<TARGET_OBJECTS:tgt>
              New in version 3.1.

              List of objects resulting from building tgt.   This  would  typically  be  used  on
              object library targets.

       $<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 policy will  be  emitted.  This  generator
              expression only works for a subset of policies.

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

              Note  that  tgt  is  not  added  as  a  dependency of the target this expression is
              evaluated on, unless the  expression  is  being  used  in  add_custom_command()  or
              add_custom_target().

       $<TARGET_FILE_BASE_NAME:tgt>
              New in version 3.15.

              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_OUTPUT_NAME    and
              RUNTIME_OUTPUT_NAME  target  properties  and  their configuration specific variants
              OUTPUT_NAME_<CONFIG>,  ARCHIVE_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>
              New in version 3.15.

              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>
              New in version 3.15.

              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 library associated with the DLL.

       $<TARGET_LINKER_FILE_BASE_NAME:tgt>
              New in version 3.15.

              Base name of file used to link the target tgt, i.e.  $<TARGET_LINKER_FILE_NAME:tgt>
              without  prefix and suffix. For example, if target file name is libbase.a, the base
              name is base.

              See also  the  OUTPUT_NAME,  ARCHIVE_OUTPUT_NAME,  and  LIBRARY_OUTPUT_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>
              New in version 3.15.

              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>
              New in version 3.15.

              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>
              New in version 3.1.

              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>
              New in version 3.15.

              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 example, if target file
              name is base.pdb, the base name is base.

              See  also  the  PDB_NAME  target  property  and  its configuration specific 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>
              New in version 3.1.

              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>
              New in version 3.1.

              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>
              New in version 3.9.

              Full  path  to  the  bundle  directory  (/path/to/my.app, /path/to/my.framework, or
              /path/to/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_DIR_NAME:tgt>
              New in version 3.24.

              Name of 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>
              New in version 3.9.

              Full  path  to the bundle content directory where tgt is the name of a target.  For
              the macOS SDK  it  leads  to  /path/to/my.app/Contents,  /path/to/my.framework,  or
              /path/to/my.bundle/Contents.    For   all   other  SDKs  (e.g.  iOS)  it  leads  to
              /path/to/my.app, /path/to/my.framework,  or  /path/to/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_RUNTIME_DLLS:tgt>
              New in version 3.21.

              List of DLLs that the target depends on at  runtime.  This  is  determined  by  the
              locations  of all the SHARED targets in the target's transitive dependencies. Using
              this generator expression on targets other than executables, SHARED libraries,  and
              MODULE  libraries  is  an  error.   On  non-DLL  platforms,  this expression always
              evaluates to an empty string.

              This generator expression can be used to copy all of the DLLs that a target depends
              on into its output directory in a POST_BUILD custom command. For example:

                 find_package(foo CONFIG REQUIRED) # package generated by install(EXPORT)

                 add_executable(exe main.c)
                 target_link_libraries(exe PRIVATE foo::foo foo::bar)
                 add_custom_command(TARGET exe POST_BUILD
                   COMMAND ${CMAKE_COMMAND} -E copy $<TARGET_RUNTIME_DLLS:exe> $<TARGET_FILE_DIR:exe>
                   COMMAND_EXPAND_LISTS
                 )

              NOTE:
                 Imported  Targets  are  supported  only  if they know the location of their .dll
                 files.  An imported SHARED library must have IMPORTED_LOCATION set to  its  .dll
                 file.   See  the  add_library imported libraries section for details.  Many Find
                 Modules produce imported targets with the UNKNOWN type  and  therefore  will  be
                 ignored.

   Export And Install Expressions
       $<INSTALL_INTERFACE:...>
              Content  of  ...  when  the  property  is exported using install(EXPORT), 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  buildsystem.  Expands to the empty string
              otherwise.

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

   Multi-level Expression Evaluation
       $<GENEX_EVAL:expr>
              New in version 3.12.

              Content of expr evaluated as a generator expression in the  current  context.  This
              enables  consumption  of  generator  expressions whose evaluation results itself in
              generator expressions.

       $<TARGET_GENEX_EVAL:tgt,expr>
              New in version 3.12.

              Content of expr evaluated as a generator expression in the context 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 generator 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_EXTRA_THINGS>).

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

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

   Escaped Characters
       These expressions evaluate to specific string literals. Use them in place  of  the  actual
       string literal where you need to prevent them from having their special meaning.

       $<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 ;.

   Deprecated Expressions
       $<CONFIGURATION>
              Configuration name. Deprecated since CMake 3.0. Use CONFIG instead.

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