llvm-6502/include/llvm/ADT/STLExtras.h
Chandler Carruth 305b515c27 Remove 'static' from inline functions defined in header files.
There is a pretty staggering amount of this in LLVM's header files, this
is not all of the instances I'm afraid. These include all of the
functions that (in my build) are used by a non-static inline (or
external) function. Specifically, these issues were caught by the new
'-Winternal-linkage-in-inline' warning.

I'll try to just clean up the remainder of the clearly redundant "static
inline" cases on functions (not methods!) defined within headers if
I can do so in a reliable way.

There were even several cases of a missing 'inline' altogether, or my
personal favorite "static bool inline". Go figure. ;]

git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@158800 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
2012-06-20 08:39:33 +00:00

313 lines
9.8 KiB
C++

//===- llvm/ADT/STLExtras.h - Useful STL related functions ------*- C++ -*-===//
//
// The LLVM Compiler Infrastructure
//
// This file is distributed under the University of Illinois Open Source
// License. See LICENSE.TXT for details.
//
//===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
//
// This file contains some templates that are useful if you are working with the
// STL at all.
//
// No library is required when using these functions.
//
//===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
#ifndef LLVM_ADT_STLEXTRAS_H
#define LLVM_ADT_STLEXTRAS_H
#include <cstddef> // for std::size_t
#include <cstdlib> // for qsort
#include <functional>
#include <iterator>
#include <utility> // for std::pair
namespace llvm {
//===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
// Extra additions to <functional>
//===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
template<class Ty>
struct identity : public std::unary_function<Ty, Ty> {
Ty &operator()(Ty &self) const {
return self;
}
const Ty &operator()(const Ty &self) const {
return self;
}
};
template<class Ty>
struct less_ptr : public std::binary_function<Ty, Ty, bool> {
bool operator()(const Ty* left, const Ty* right) const {
return *left < *right;
}
};
template<class Ty>
struct greater_ptr : public std::binary_function<Ty, Ty, bool> {
bool operator()(const Ty* left, const Ty* right) const {
return *right < *left;
}
};
// deleter - Very very very simple method that is used to invoke operator
// delete on something. It is used like this:
//
// for_each(V.begin(), B.end(), deleter<Interval>);
//
template <class T>
inline void deleter(T *Ptr) {
delete Ptr;
}
//===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
// Extra additions to <iterator>
//===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
// mapped_iterator - This is a simple iterator adapter that causes a function to
// be dereferenced whenever operator* is invoked on the iterator.
//
template <class RootIt, class UnaryFunc>
class mapped_iterator {
RootIt current;
UnaryFunc Fn;
public:
typedef typename std::iterator_traits<RootIt>::iterator_category
iterator_category;
typedef typename std::iterator_traits<RootIt>::difference_type
difference_type;
typedef typename UnaryFunc::result_type value_type;
typedef void pointer;
//typedef typename UnaryFunc::result_type *pointer;
typedef void reference; // Can't modify value returned by fn
typedef RootIt iterator_type;
typedef mapped_iterator<RootIt, UnaryFunc> _Self;
inline const RootIt &getCurrent() const { return current; }
inline const UnaryFunc &getFunc() const { return Fn; }
inline explicit mapped_iterator(const RootIt &I, UnaryFunc F)
: current(I), Fn(F) {}
inline mapped_iterator(const mapped_iterator &It)
: current(It.current), Fn(It.Fn) {}
inline value_type operator*() const { // All this work to do this
return Fn(*current); // little change
}
_Self& operator++() { ++current; return *this; }
_Self& operator--() { --current; return *this; }
_Self operator++(int) { _Self __tmp = *this; ++current; return __tmp; }
_Self operator--(int) { _Self __tmp = *this; --current; return __tmp; }
_Self operator+ (difference_type n) const {
return _Self(current + n, Fn);
}
_Self& operator+= (difference_type n) { current += n; return *this; }
_Self operator- (difference_type n) const {
return _Self(current - n, Fn);
}
_Self& operator-= (difference_type n) { current -= n; return *this; }
reference operator[](difference_type n) const { return *(*this + n); }
inline bool operator!=(const _Self &X) const { return !operator==(X); }
inline bool operator==(const _Self &X) const { return current == X.current; }
inline bool operator< (const _Self &X) const { return current < X.current; }
inline difference_type operator-(const _Self &X) const {
return current - X.current;
}
};
template <class _Iterator, class Func>
inline mapped_iterator<_Iterator, Func>
operator+(typename mapped_iterator<_Iterator, Func>::difference_type N,
const mapped_iterator<_Iterator, Func>& X) {
return mapped_iterator<_Iterator, Func>(X.getCurrent() - N, X.getFunc());
}
// map_iterator - Provide a convenient way to create mapped_iterators, just like
// make_pair is useful for creating pairs...
//
template <class ItTy, class FuncTy>
inline mapped_iterator<ItTy, FuncTy> map_iterator(const ItTy &I, FuncTy F) {
return mapped_iterator<ItTy, FuncTy>(I, F);
}
// next/prior - These functions unlike std::advance do not modify the
// passed iterator but return a copy.
//
// next(myIt) returns copy of myIt incremented once
// next(myIt, n) returns copy of myIt incremented n times
// prior(myIt) returns copy of myIt decremented once
// prior(myIt, n) returns copy of myIt decremented n times
template <typename ItTy, typename Dist>
inline ItTy next(ItTy it, Dist n)
{
std::advance(it, n);
return it;
}
template <typename ItTy>
inline ItTy next(ItTy it)
{
return ++it;
}
template <typename ItTy, typename Dist>
inline ItTy prior(ItTy it, Dist n)
{
std::advance(it, -n);
return it;
}
template <typename ItTy>
inline ItTy prior(ItTy it)
{
return --it;
}
//===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
// Extra additions to <utility>
//===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
// tie - this function ties two objects and returns a temporary object
// that is assignable from a std::pair. This can be used to make code
// more readable when using values returned from functions bundled in
// a std::pair. Since an example is worth 1000 words:
//
// typedef std::map<int, int> Int2IntMap;
//
// Int2IntMap myMap;
// Int2IntMap::iterator where;
// bool inserted;
// tie(where, inserted) = myMap.insert(std::make_pair(123,456));
//
// if (inserted)
// // do stuff
// else
// // do other stuff
template <typename T1, typename T2>
struct tier {
typedef T1 &first_type;
typedef T2 &second_type;
first_type first;
second_type second;
tier(first_type f, second_type s) : first(f), second(s) { }
tier& operator=(const std::pair<T1, T2>& p) {
first = p.first;
second = p.second;
return *this;
}
};
template <typename T1, typename T2>
inline tier<T1, T2> tie(T1& f, T2& s) {
return tier<T1, T2>(f, s);
}
//===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
// Extra additions for arrays
//===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
/// Find where an array ends (for ending iterators)
/// This returns a pointer to the byte immediately
/// after the end of an array.
template<class T, std::size_t N>
inline T *array_endof(T (&x)[N]) {
return x+N;
}
/// Find the length of an array.
template<class T, std::size_t N>
inline size_t array_lengthof(T (&)[N]) {
return N;
}
/// array_pod_sort_comparator - This is helper function for array_pod_sort,
/// which just uses operator< on T.
template<typename T>
inline int array_pod_sort_comparator(const void *P1, const void *P2) {
if (*reinterpret_cast<const T*>(P1) < *reinterpret_cast<const T*>(P2))
return -1;
if (*reinterpret_cast<const T*>(P2) < *reinterpret_cast<const T*>(P1))
return 1;
return 0;
}
/// get_array_pad_sort_comparator - This is an internal helper function used to
/// get type deduction of T right.
template<typename T>
inline int (*get_array_pad_sort_comparator(const T &))
(const void*, const void*) {
return array_pod_sort_comparator<T>;
}
/// array_pod_sort - This sorts an array with the specified start and end
/// extent. This is just like std::sort, except that it calls qsort instead of
/// using an inlined template. qsort is slightly slower than std::sort, but
/// most sorts are not performance critical in LLVM and std::sort has to be
/// template instantiated for each type, leading to significant measured code
/// bloat. This function should generally be used instead of std::sort where
/// possible.
///
/// This function assumes that you have simple POD-like types that can be
/// compared with operator< and can be moved with memcpy. If this isn't true,
/// you should use std::sort.
///
/// NOTE: If qsort_r were portable, we could allow a custom comparator and
/// default to std::less.
template<class IteratorTy>
inline void array_pod_sort(IteratorTy Start, IteratorTy End) {
// Don't dereference start iterator of empty sequence.
if (Start == End) return;
qsort(&*Start, End-Start, sizeof(*Start),
get_array_pad_sort_comparator(*Start));
}
template<class IteratorTy>
inline void array_pod_sort(IteratorTy Start, IteratorTy End,
int (*Compare)(const void*, const void*)) {
// Don't dereference start iterator of empty sequence.
if (Start == End) return;
qsort(&*Start, End-Start, sizeof(*Start), Compare);
}
//===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
// Extra additions to <algorithm>
//===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
/// For a container of pointers, deletes the pointers and then clears the
/// container.
template<typename Container>
void DeleteContainerPointers(Container &C) {
for (typename Container::iterator I = C.begin(), E = C.end(); I != E; ++I)
delete *I;
C.clear();
}
/// In a container of pairs (usually a map) whose second element is a pointer,
/// deletes the second elements and then clears the container.
template<typename Container>
void DeleteContainerSeconds(Container &C) {
for (typename Container::iterator I = C.begin(), E = C.end(); I != E; ++I)
delete I->second;
C.clear();
}
} // End llvm namespace
#endif