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c - Is it standard for #if to assume undefined symbolic constants as 0?

In this c program

#include<stdio.h>
int main()
{

        #if UnDefinedSymbolicConstant==0
                printf("UnDefinedSymbolicConstant is equal to 0
 ");
        #else
                printf("UnDefinedSymbolicConstant is not equal to 0
");

        #endif
        return 0;
}

UnDefinedSymbolicConstant has not been #define anywhere, still it is being assumed as 0 and gives the output on gcc-4.3.4 as:

UnDefinedSymbolicConstant is equal to 0

so, Is this the standard behaviour or it works like this only in gcc?

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Yes, this is specified by the standard in 6.10.1:

After all replacements due to macro expansion and the defined unary operator have been performed, all remaining identifiers (including those lexically identical to keywords) are replaced with the pp-number 0


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