@DzekTrek ODR stands for the 'one-definition rule'. It's a pretty involved bit of standardese (in both the C Standard and the C++ Standard), the gist of it being that any one C++ entity that is not a template can only ever have one definition per TU (for types) or program (for functions). Hence the 'one definition rule'. In some cases one entity can have more than one definition, and inline is used to 'get excused' into those cases.
And the standardese doesn't use the word 'entity' to refer to those things that the ODR apply to. I forgot what the actual term is, perhaps 'names'? Since those have linkage right?
Like, my program is consisted of many functions that each of them deals with specific type, for instance computeFloat(float a,float b) ... computeDouble(double a, double b) and so on?
It is already written somewhere in the headers to deal with it, right?
Uh, what's an inline. I followed you when you mentioned functions. In any case, if that's what you're wondering, (freestanding) functions that you define won't implicitly be declared inline. Member functions get that under certain conditions though.
Please note that even using inline isn't a full, 'hands-off' dispensation. There are still restrictions on the (now possibly several) definitions you write for one function.
Well, instead of remembering an actual SO question/answer, I remembered that Johannes has an answer in his favourites regarding ODR. Far too long for me to see how exhaustive and relevant it is or isn't.
@DzekTrek You did well to ask me for a more detailed version as what I explained to you glossed over a lot, and I do mean a lot of details. (The kind of details that can lead to UB unfortunately.)
Notably it isn't so much that you can turn off the ODR but you can instead switch to a different version of it... ("You can have several definitions as long as they're all the same, for some meaning of 'same'.")
well... functors, smart-pointers, scary TYPE_LIST_42 macro - now we have boost or std replacements for them. IMO the only useful reading there - is the Visitor pattern implementation
I remember when I joined SO boost::any was getting mentioned anytime something even a bit dynamic came up ("what if I don't want to set my function parameters in stone" etc.). Not so much the case these days, is it?
Anyway, back there I was trying to say that boost::any wins over void* because it blows up if you miscast, while void* just happily UBs all over your code.
I've got a hierarchy of game objects:
class GameObject {
public:
virtual void update(float dt) = 0;
virtual void draw() = 0;
};
class Building : public GameObject {}
class Sawmill : public Building {}
class Human : public GameObject {}
and so on. All objects are managed by the game (wh...
I have tried to compile clang and llvm using the clang getting started manaul. However, at step 5, when I do make, I get the following error. Any idea what is going on here, and how to fix it?
cp: cannot stat `/home/MetallicPriest/Desktop/build/tools/clang/runtime/compiler-rt/clang_linux/full-x8...
Ok, I'm trying to write a release function for my ptr_vector. I'm wondering whether I should first delete the object gotten with at(..) or first erase it from the ptr_vectorusing erase-remove??
template<typename T>
void ptr_vector<T>::release(size_type index)
{
T* t = vec_.at(index); //Delete first or erase from vec_ first?
}
@TonyTheLion If you delete first, and this fails (which it shouldn't, but indulge me), then you end up with a potentially stray pointer in your container. If you erase from the container first, and this fails, then at worst you have leaked and object. Seems a straight-forward decision to me.
@TonyTheLion I am struggling to understand this algorithm. So you pass in an index, the algorithm takes the pointer at that index, and the goes to remove all occurrences of said pointer? Either I'm missing something or this is odd behavior for a release() member function.
If the user doesn't want to pay the cost of bounds checking (e.g. because it can statically prove the index is correct, or because the checking was already done) then your interface can't help.
If on the other hand you provide an interface that doesn't do bounds checking for release, the caller/user can still manually check if that is needed.
@TonyTheLion If I call std::vector<T>.erase() with a stray iterator, it blows up into my face, but it does so fast. If I want to trade fault tolerance for speed, I can always insert a check myself, before calling erase(). In your implementation, employing at() takes the ability away from to decide for myself whether I want to have speed of fault tolerance. I'd resent that.