It is simply a macro that expands to, well, nothing. However, now that the macro has been defined you can check with #if defined (or #ifdef) whether it has been defined.
#define FOO
int main(){
FOO FOO FOO
printf("Hello world");
}
will expand to
int main(){
printf("Hello world");
}
There are certain situations where this comes in very handy, for example additional debug information, which you don’t want to show in your release version:
/* Defined only during debug compilations: */
#define CONFIG_USE_DEBUG_MESSAGES
#ifdef CONFIG_USE_DEBUG_MESSAGES
#define DEBUG_MSG(x) print(x)
#else
#define DEBUG_MSG(x) do {} while(0)
#endif
int main(){
DEBUG_MSG("Entering main");
/* ... */
}
Since the macro CONFIG_USE_DEBUG_MESSAGES has been defined, DEBUG_MSG(x) will expand to print(x) and you will get Entering main. If you remove the #define, DEBUG_MSG(x) expands to an empty do–while loop and you won’t see the message.