| 1 | Operator Defaults | 
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| 2 | ================= | 
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| 3 |  | 
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| 4 | This proposal introduces a new syntax for requesting a default implementation | 
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| 5 | of an operator and the rules for generating them. | 
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| 6 |  | 
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| 7 | This is to build on the implied relationships between operators. Most default | 
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| 8 | operators will be implemented in terms of other operators. As a fall-back | 
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| 9 | operators can try to figure out an intuitive definition from inspection of the | 
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| 10 | type's sue declaration. | 
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| 11 |  | 
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| 12 | Syntax | 
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| 13 | ------ | 
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| 14 |  | 
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| 15 | The syntax for requesting a default implementation is part of function | 
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| 16 | definition. After the function signature (after the parameter list) instead | 
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| 17 | of putting the function body you declare it to be equal to default. | 
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| 18 |  | 
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| 19 | box ?+?(box const & left, box const & right) = default; | 
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| 20 |  | 
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| 21 | These can exist along side any forward definitions of the function, but would | 
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| 22 | conflict with any other complete definitions or deletions of the function. | 
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| 23 |  | 
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| 24 | It could be valid syntax on any function, but possibly all non-operators would | 
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| 25 | report that no default implementation available. | 
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| 26 |  | 
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| 27 | If default implementations are really popular and we don't need additional | 
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| 28 | information about the signature a more compact syntax could be added. | 
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| 29 |  | 
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| 30 | default box( ?(), ?=?, ?!=?, ?<?, ?>?, ?<=?, ?>=? ); | 
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| 31 |  | 
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| 32 | Generation Strategies | 
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| 33 | --------------------- | 
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| 34 |  | 
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| 35 | There exists a system around the default generation that selects how to | 
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| 36 | generate a given function if one can be generated at all. This section | 
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| 37 | describes that system and some of the logic behind it. | 
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| 38 |  | 
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| 39 | There are two main strategies for generating an operator implementation. | 
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| 40 |  | 
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| 41 | The first is to mimic the relationship between operators on the primitive | 
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| 42 | types by defining a new operator in terms of an existing operator on the same | 
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| 43 | type. For instance `++i` is equivalent to `i += 1`, so the generated | 
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| 44 | implementation will "look like" that. | 
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| 45 |  | 
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| 46 | The second is to inspect the structure of the declaration to guess at what | 
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| 47 | the default implementation would be. Because of that it is dependent on the | 
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| 48 | kind of declaration, a structure doesn't have the same rules as an | 
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| 49 | enumeration. Also it is similar to the implicate definitions currently created | 
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| 50 | by the compiler and the generation methods for many are carried over. | 
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| 51 |  | 
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| 52 | From these strategies a method of generation (a particular set of rules that | 
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| 53 | define an implementation from the type and existing functions) has to be | 
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| 54 | picked, but often there is more than on reasonable choice. In these cases they | 
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| 55 | are ordered and the first (best) one whose requirements is met is then used. | 
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| 56 | See "Circular Requirements" below for some exceptions and extensions to this | 
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| 57 | pattern. | 
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| 58 |  | 
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| 59 | Generally the methods based on operators come first as they propagate any | 
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| 60 | unusual implementations from the explicate operators to the ones being | 
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| 61 | generated. If all of those fail then the intuitive definition based on the | 
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| 62 | declaration's shape is used. The general patterns in this area for the | 
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| 63 | different sue types follow. | 
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| 64 |  | 
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| 65 | ### Structures | 
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| 66 | Structures will usually apply the operation to each field, or when there are | 
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| 67 | two parameters the matching pairs of fields from each, and then combine the | 
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| 68 | results. | 
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| 69 |  | 
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| 70 | This does require that the fields have certain operators defined on them. | 
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| 71 | In this respect it is still operator based generation, but we use inspection | 
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| 72 | on the structure to find out which operators to use. | 
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| 73 |  | 
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| 74 | Also, for the purposes of default generation types declared with the | 
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| 75 | concurrency modifiers (coroutine, monitor and thread) are considered structs. | 
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| 76 | The default implementations should be the same as if you had written out the | 
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| 77 | extra field and functions by hand. | 
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| 78 |  | 
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| 79 | ### Enumerations | 
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| 80 | The two ways of using enumerations are considered. First as "one of" the | 
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| 81 | list options as in normal use, the second is as a set of flags where each | 
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| 82 | option represents a flag that may or may not be set. | 
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| 83 |  | 
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| 84 | Currently there is no way to specify which nor does the system attempt to | 
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| 85 | guess by checking assigned values. There is one case where an operator could | 
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| 86 | have a meaningful default in both versions. If both are included then we can | 
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| 87 | try to pick one by scanning the enumeration to see what values its options | 
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| 88 | are given (a linear series or powers of 2) could be used. In all other cases | 
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| 89 | the definition that makes sense can be assumed. | 
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| 90 |  | 
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| 91 | ### Unions | 
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| 92 | Unions are the hardest to deal with because the instance does not show which | 
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| 93 | field in the union is being used. Because of that there are very few intuitive | 
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| 94 | definitions to use and the ones that do depend on bit-wise operations and only | 
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| 95 | if the union is made of primitive types. | 
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| 96 |  | 
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| 97 | ### Traits | 
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| 98 | Default operations are not supported on traits. A function implemented by the | 
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| 99 | default generation may be used to satisfy an assertion. However a default | 
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| 100 | implementation may not be requested on a polymorphic function. | 
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| 101 |  | 
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| 102 | It could in theory, limiting to operation based generation and using the | 
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| 103 | operations available in the assertion list. There are a few problems: | 
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| 104 | +   Knowing the entire set of functions being generated is very useful in some | 
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| 105 | cases and this information is quickly lost with polymorphic functions. | 
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| 106 | +   The rules for choosing a generation method do not match how a polymorphic | 
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| 107 | function is selected so the results can be inconsistent. | 
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| 108 | +   It is easily to mimic with a polymorphic function already, writing out one | 
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| 109 | generic function and including it. | 
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| 110 |  | 
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| 111 | Default Generation | 
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| 112 | ------------------ | 
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| 113 |  | 
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| 114 | Here are the generation methods. Unless otherwise stated they are listed in | 
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| 115 | priority order. That is the first one mentioned that a type fits (has all the | 
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| 116 | required operators or its form matches) will be used. | 
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| 117 |  | 
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| 118 | The operator based constructions can be used on any sue type, those that | 
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| 119 | require a particular kind mention that. | 
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| 120 |  | 
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| 121 | ### Constructor: ?{} | 
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| 122 | Note that requesting any constructor to be generated counts as defining a | 
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| 123 | constructor for purposes of disabling the implicate constructors. There are | 
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| 124 | no operator based methods for generating constructors. | 
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| 125 |  | 
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| 126 | For structures: For the zero argument constructor (aka the default constructor, | 
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| 127 | which takes just a reference to the value to construct) each field is | 
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| 128 | constructed with its zero argument constructor. For the copy constructor each | 
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| 129 | field is copy constructed from the same field in the copied structure. For | 
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| 130 | zero_t and one_t each field is also constructed from zero_t or one_t. | 
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| 131 |  | 
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| 132 | For enumerations: For the zero argument constructor the value is set to 0 if | 
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| 133 | one of the enumeration options is 0 (or set to the first value in the enum). | 
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| 134 | For the zero_t constructor it is the same except the check is skipped (and no | 
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| 135 | or). The copy constructor is the same as memcpy. | 
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| 136 |  | 
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| 137 | For unions: For the zero argument constructor of a union that is constructed | 
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| 138 | entirely of primitive types (or other types that zero argument construct to | 
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| 139 | all 0s) the union filled with 0s. For the copy constructor of a union of types | 
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| 140 | that all have trivial copy constructors memcpy is used. | 
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| 141 |  | 
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| 142 | ### Destructor: ^?{} | 
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| 143 | Requesting the default destructor should be the same as having it implicitly | 
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| 144 | defined. Destructors only have one signature and the intuitive definition for | 
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| 145 | that is the same as without the signature. | 
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| 146 |  | 
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| 147 | Still it should be allowed for consistency. It also allows it to be forward | 
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| 148 | declared and then generated in a .cfa file. | 
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| 149 |  | 
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| 150 | ### Assignment: ?=? | 
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| 151 | Default assignment is only supported between two objects of the same type. | 
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| 152 | For structures it is field to field assignment. For enumerations and unions | 
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| 153 | of primitives or trivially copiable types it the same as memcpy. | 
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| 154 |  | 
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| 155 | ### Equality: ?==? ?!=? | 
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| 156 | Both equality operations can be implemented by negating the result of the | 
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| 157 | other operations. | 
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| 158 |  | 
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| 159 | For structures: Equality can be implement by checking equality on each pair of | 
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| 160 | matching fields and taking the logical and of the results. Inequality can be | 
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| 161 | implemented by checking inequality on each pair of matching fields and taking | 
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| 162 | the logical or of the results. | 
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| 163 |  | 
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| 164 | Both logical operations could be short circuiting. Without side effects it is | 
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| 165 | purely an optimization. | 
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| 166 |  | 
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| 167 | For enumerations: Both operations are the same as on the underlying integral. | 
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| 168 |  | 
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| 169 | For unions: If it is assumed that the different branches represent different | 
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| 170 | views of the same data and this data is primitive, than bit-wise comparisons | 
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| 171 | can be used. | 
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| 172 |  | 
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| 173 | ### Comparison: ?<? ?>? ?<=? ?>=? | 
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| 174 | Less than can be implemented by flipping the arguments on greater than. | 
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| 175 | Greater than can be implemented by flipping less then. Less than or equal to | 
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| 176 | can be implemented by flipping greater than or equal to. Greater than or equal | 
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| 177 | to can be implemented by flipping less than or equal to. | 
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| 178 |  | 
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| 179 | Less than or equal to can be implemented by using less than, equals and taking | 
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| 180 | the or of the results. Greater than or equal to can be implemented by using | 
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| 181 | greater than, equals and taking the or of the results. | 
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| 182 |  | 
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| 183 | > The trick of negating comparisons is not used. As an example ?<? is not | 
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| 184 | > (boolean) not ?>=? unless the type is strictly ordered. For operator based | 
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| 185 | > overloads that might not be true in very reasonable implementations so it is | 
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| 186 | > not assumed. | 
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| 187 |  | 
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| 188 | Opposite less than can be implemented as less than or equal to and not equal | 
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| 189 | to. Greater than can be implemented as greater than or equal to and not equal | 
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| 190 | to. | 
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| 191 |  | 
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| 192 | For enumerations: Enumerations that represent one of all operations are the | 
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| 193 | same as on the underlying integral. Enumerations that represent a set of | 
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| 194 | options could replace less then with subset of and greator than with superset | 
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| 195 | of and use bit-wise masking to implement those operations. | 
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| 196 |  | 
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| 197 | ### Binary & Relative Assignment Operators: ?_? ?_=? | 
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| 198 | This applies to each operator in the form of `T ?_?(T, T);` for some type T | 
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| 199 | and has a matching relative assignment operator `T& ?_=?(T&, T)` where the | 
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| 200 | `_` in both is replaced by some string of operator characters. | 
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| 201 |  | 
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| 202 | The binary operator can be created by copying the left argument, using the | 
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| 203 | relative assignment with the right argument and returning the updated copy. | 
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| 204 |  | 
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| 205 | The relative assignment operator can be implemented by using the binary | 
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| 206 | operation to create a copy, then assigning the result to the left argument. | 
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| 207 | The left argument should then be returned. For the signature above it would | 
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| 208 | return by reference. The signature `T ?_=?(T&, T)` could also be supported in | 
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| 209 | which case it would return by copy. | 
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| 210 |  | 
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| 211 | ### Minus: -? ?-? | 
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| 212 | Unary minus can be implemented by subtracting argument from the value created | 
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| 213 | from zero_t. | 
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| 214 |  | 
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| 215 | Binary minus can be implemented by negating (with unary minus) the right | 
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| 216 | argument and adding the result to the left argument. | 
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| 217 |  | 
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| 218 | ### Increment & Decrement: ++? ?++ --? ?-- | 
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| 219 | Either pre- operation can implemented by applying the post- operation and then | 
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| 220 | returning a reference to, or copy of, the updated value. Either post- | 
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| 221 | operation can be implemented by copying the argument, applying the pre- | 
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| 222 | operation to the original and returning the copy. | 
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| 223 |  | 
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| 224 | Pre-increment can be implemented by using addition assignment by the value | 
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| 225 | constructed from one_t. Pre-decrement can be implemented by using subtraction | 
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| 226 | assignment by the value from one_t. | 
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| 227 |  | 
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| 228 | Because many of the operations used have there own default implementations | 
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| 229 | (for example: ?+=? from ?+? or field-wise one_t construction) this list could | 
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| 230 | be expanded by replacing a function call with the default implementation for | 
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| 231 | that function. This might work for the post- operations generated from | 
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| 232 | relative assignment, the one_t constructed object and copying, but the logical | 
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| 233 | connection becomes weaker and weaker as that process continues. | 
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| 234 |  | 
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| 235 | ### Bit Manipulation: ?|? ?&? ~? ?<<? ?>>? | 
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| 236 | No operation based construction is provided for bit manipulation operators. | 
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| 237 |  | 
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| 238 | For enumerations that are considered sets of flags: And returns a set with all | 
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| 239 | flags set in both operand sets, or returns a set with all flags set that are | 
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| 240 | set in either operand sets and not returns a set with all flags set that are | 
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| 241 | not set in the operand set. | 
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| 242 |  | 
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| 243 | > And it would be possible to actually implement this for any sized type and | 
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| 244 | > just do the bitwise operation and trust the user that it makes sense if they | 
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| 245 | > request it. | 
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| 246 |  | 
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| 247 | Also for set enumerations, the signature `T ?<<?(one_t, unsigned)` also has | 
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| 248 | some use, as it can be used to implement a loop that goes over each flag, | 
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| 249 | instead of each combination of flags. | 
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| 250 |  | 
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| 251 | ### Logical Negation: !? | 
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| 252 | Not can be implemented by negating the result of a conversion to boolean, the | 
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| 253 | does not equal 0 test. | 
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| 254 |  | 
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| 255 | Circular Requirements | 
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| 256 | --------------------- | 
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| 257 |  | 
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| 258 | There are several cases where there are two operators that can be implemented | 
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| 259 | with the other operator. If both are implemented that way calling either of | 
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| 260 | them could result in infinite recursion. | 
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| 261 |  | 
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| 262 | The simplest way to handle the issue would be to tell the user to not do that, | 
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| 263 | they are responsible for providing the base operations. This is C like but is | 
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| 264 | perhaps more error prone than it would save in work and if we do check we can | 
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| 265 | automatically use fallbacks. | 
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| 266 |  | 
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| 267 | Before generating any default implementations the compiler should generate | 
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| 268 | a list of everything it has been requested and ignore any generation methods | 
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| 269 | that would lead to chains instead of counting other defaults that could lead | 
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| 270 | to a loop. As a further improvment this could be done selectively to break | 
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| 271 | rings while allowing chains of non-recurive implementations. | 
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| 272 |  | 
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| 273 | For instance if both ?==? and ?!=? are requested they cannot both be defined | 
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| 274 | as the negation of each other. In the simple version they would both be | 
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| 275 | generated by introspection on the declaration. With the more selective version | 
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| 276 | one could be generated by introspection and the other by negating that result. | 
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| 277 |  | 
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| 278 | However there are still ways to get around this by placing the function | 
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| 279 | definitions in different translation units or defining a function that uses | 
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| 280 | an operator that is default generated to use it. Searching for all these cases | 
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| 281 | is probably not worth it, although checking for some might be useful warnings. | 
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