Displaying 8 results from an estimated 8 matches for "iteratortyp".
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iteratortype
2013 Jan 09
5
[LLVMdev] Using C++'11 language features in LLVM itself
...ybe you could try
> bringing that into tree?
The C++ proposal changes rapidly. While it would be great to get usage
experience from LLVM in order to inform the C++ proposal, I don't have
"what will eventually be in C++" to propose for LLVM. Well, I'd expect
some "range<IteratorType>" template with .begin() and .end() methods,
but I don't even know what name that template will have.
I'm not sure this part of the discussion is on-topic for Chris's
thread, since it's not related to a potential problem with enabling
C++ language features. (Not having a r...
2013 Jan 09
0
[LLVMdev] Using C++'11 language features in LLVM itself
...n at googlers.com> wrote:
> The C++ proposal changes rapidly. While it would be great to get usage
> experience from LLVM in order to inform the C++ proposal, I don't have
> "what will eventually be in C++" to propose for LLVM. Well, I'd expect
> some "range<IteratorType>" template with .begin() and .end() methods,
> but I don't even know what name that template will have.
Ah, I wasn't aware that it wasn't mostly stabilized. As you pointed
out, this isn't critical, so we don't need to rush it then.
> I'm not sure this part o...
2013 Jan 09
0
[LLVMdev] Using C++'11 language features in LLVM itself
...inging that into tree?
>
> The C++ proposal changes rapidly. While it would be great to get usage
> experience from LLVM in order to inform the C++ proposal, I don't have
> "what will eventually be in C++" to propose for LLVM. Well, I'd expect
> some "range<IteratorType>" template with .begin() and .end() methods,
> but I don't even know what name that template will have.
>
> I'm not sure this part of the discussion is on-topic for Chris's
> thread, since it's not related to a potential problem with enabling
> C++ language...
2013 Jan 09
0
[LLVMdev] Using C++'11 language features in LLVM itself
On Tue, Jan 8, 2013 at 6:45 PM, Chris Lattner <clattner at apple.com> wrote:
> some version of GCC and later (linux folks should pick?)
4.6 is the official compiler on Ubuntu 12.04 (released 04/2012), which
is the latest Long Term Support release (which come out every 2 years,
with 3 years desktop support and 5 years server support), so I
wouldn't push farther than that on Linux for
2013 Jan 09
3
[LLVMdev] Using C++'11 language features in LLVM itself
...ee?
>>
>> The C++ proposal changes rapidly. While it would be great to get usage
>> experience from LLVM in order to inform the C++ proposal, I don't have
>> "what will eventually be in C++" to propose for LLVM. Well, I'd expect
>> some "range<IteratorType>" template with .begin() and .end() methods,
>> but I don't even know what name that template will have.
>>
>> I'm not sure this part of the discussion is on-topic for Chris's
>> thread, since it's not related to a potential problem with enabling
>...
2009 Aug 24
0
[LLVMdev] Regular Expression lib support
...bt it
would be any shorter or faster to write (and especially to execute)
then the spirit example for note.
std/tr1/boost::regex (the C++ standard): // dynamic regex, so it is
slow in comparison to other alternatives
bool parse_test(std::string &testStr, myPair &ret)
{
match_results<IteratorType> m;
regex e(regexStr);
bool successful = regex_match(testStr.begin(),testStr.end(),m,e,match_extra);
if(successful)
{
float f;
vector<int> &i_list = myPair.second;
f = atof(m[1].c_str());
myPair.first=f;
for(int i = 2; i < what.captures(2).size(); ++i)...
2009 Aug 24
2
[LLVMdev] Regular Expression lib support
On Aug 23, 2009, at 5:50 PM, OvermindDL1 wrote:
> On Sun, Aug 23, 2009 at 6:32 PM, Daniel Dunbar<daniel at zuster.org>
> wrote:
>> This is too heavy, and we don't need the extra features, and regexec
>> is well tested and much more standard. Unless there is an
>> overwhelming
>
> 'regexec' I had never heard of, figured it was a library, turns
2013 Jan 08
15
[LLVMdev] Using C++'11 language features in LLVM itself
It's seems like a quiet and peaceful day, lets stir things up a bit :)
How crazy would it be for us to start using basic C++'11 language features (but not C++'11 library features) in LLVM: things like auto, rvalue-refs, lambdas, etc? I think that we can keep things well defined with a few simple requirements: language features must be supported by MSVC 2010 and later, some version of