So I've been struggling for an elegant design for this kind of paradigm. I have an item with a method like bool item::is_valid() {return check1() && check2() && check3();} So, this is kinda fine, but hard to understand what exactly failed when is_valid() returns false. Is there some good way to curry that information?
Notice that even doing something like this:
auto check1_result =check1();
auto check2_result = check2();
return check1_result && check2_result;
Has a potential performance implication
@Mikhail What type are you returning that could give that a performance implication? If check1() and check2() are both returning bool, a performance hit would be rather unexpected (in fact, I'd usually expect identical generated code).
Oh, you mean the call to `check2` even if `check1` has already failed? Fair enough. In that case, I'd probably do something on this order: auto check1_result = check1(); return check1_result && check2();
Yes, for that you probably want something like 0 = all good, 1 = 1 failed, 2 = 2 failed. auto check1_result = check1; if (!check1) return 1; return 2 * !check2();
If you have a lot of the check functions, you'd probably want to put pointers to them in an array/vector, and walk through it: for (int i=0; i<checks.size(); i++) if (!checks[i]()) return 1 << i; return 0;
@Mikhail Haven't seen any snow here at the house, but yeah, I guess some parts of town saw a little. By San Diego standards it has be brutally frigid for a few days now. So cold that in fact, Even I actually put on a light sweater, but when I went to the store, there were people in winter coats that looked suitable for a trek to Mount Everest or the south pole.
@Mgetz Despite play of words, my white/creamy hen indeed walks like a rooster, with her head up and chest high. She also enjoys gang fight, once I saw her running over the yard so she could join a cockerel fighting a pullet.
This special Guru of the Week series focuses on contracts. Postconditions are directly related to assertions (see GotW #97)… but how, exactly? And since we can already write postconditions using assertions, why would having language support benefit us more for writing postconditions more than for writing (ordinary) assertions? JG Question 1. What is a postcondition, … Continue reading Got…