Conversation started Jan 15, 2011 at 10:44.
Jan 15, 2011 10:44
btw, are there any reliable, up to date benchmarks for the overhead introduced by lambdas/bind over manual closures?
there isn't any
and there never was
the compiler produces a closure automatically which, in worst case, is the same as the closure you wrote manually
in the best case, the compiler has many optimizations available
for example, if you refer to a lot of stack variables, the compiler can pass a stack pointer rather than a manual reference to every variable
and, for example, the lambda doesn't need a run-time member function selection
whereas when using the bind system, you have to de-reference that member function pointer
By the way, I am really looking forward to the new for loop:
for (auto& x : vec)
{
    bar.process(x);
}
@DeadMG I’m not sure. Over manual closures – OK. But over hand-written loops? The compiler has to copy local variables … introduce extra indirection (pointer overhead)
@FredOverflow BOOST_FOREACH!
what local variables?
Hey guys
Jan 15, 2011 10:48
if you refer to them, then it doesn't do any copying
@KonradRudolph I once tried to figure out how BOOST_FOREACH worked and got a massive headache.
and the body of std::for_each is just as far away in memory as the body of a normal for loop
@DeadMG right, copying was the wrong word. But there is an extra indirection through the reference or a pointer
not after inlining
and what happens for lambdas that are returned from a function (can C++ do that?)
@DeadMG right, that seems reasonable
Jan 15, 2011 10:49
either the references are busted, as normal
or you copied the values and they're fine
@FredOverflow what? headache? it works exactly like your loop above
@FredOverflow, I read an article on how it works and it bust my head aswell.
(forget that comment, misunderstood)
lambda bodies, especially in the case of simple algorithms like for_each, are practically the poster child for easy, effective inlining
 
Conversation ended Jan 15, 2011 at 10:51.