I had added support in the Boost PP library in C20 mode ( __cplusplus > 201703L ) for the __VA_OPT__ construct and enhanced an internal function used fairly extensively in the library to use this functionality in c20 mode when __VA_OPT__ was supported. I had tested this against the compilers which I knew could operate in c20 mode, gcc and clang, and all was well. I just discovered that the vc++ compiler can also work in c20 mode in Boost PP as defined above if you pass the '/std:c++latest' and the '/Zc:__cplusplus' command line switches and that vc++, in its usual non-standard way, blows up badly when doing so using the preprocessor library because it can not handle the rather simple code that checks for __VA_OPT__ support in c20 mode. I have a simple fix for this which is to turn off the __VA_OPT__ support and __VA_OPT__ support checking in c20 mode specifically for vc++ and removes which I have pushed to 'develop'. Can I push this fix to the 'master' branch now ? The fix needs to get in the coming release or else vc++ programmers specifying both the '/std:c++latest' and the '/Zc:__cplusplus' command line switched will not be able to use Boost PP and the many libraries which use Boost PP in the upcoming release. I apologize for the seeming aggressiveness of this change, which incorporated the c20 __VA_OPT__ support internally in some much-used Boost PP functionality when c20 mode is being used, but I did not anticipate that it would blow up on me, although maybe I should have. I can also remove that internal dependency with a very simple one-line change. I realize that Boost PP stability has to be maintained, even in c20 mode for the few compilers which support that mode and apologize again that I have endangered it there.