Using policy based design `SinglyLinkedList` and
`SinglyLinkedListWithCount` can be combined into one class which takes
a policy to determine how to keep track of the size of the list. The
default policy is to use list iteration to count the items in the list
each time. The `WithCount` form is a different policy which tracks the
size, but comes with the overhead of storing the count and
incrementing/decrementing on each modification.
This model is extensible to have other forms of counting by
implementing only a new policy instead of implementing a totally new
type.
A possible integer overflow might have occured inside the function in
case (number % unit) * 10 did not fit into a u64. So it is verified that
this does not happen at the beginning of the function.
These instances were detected by searching for files that include
IterationDecision.h, but don't match the regex:
\\bIterationDecision(?!\.h>)\\b
This is the only symbol defined by IterationDecision.h.
In theory, one might use LibCPP to detect things like this
automatically, but let's do this one step after another.
These instances were detected by searching for files that include
Array.h, but don't match the regex:
\\b(Array(?!\.h>)|iota_array|integer_sequence_generate_array)\\b
These are the three symbols defined by Array.h.
In theory, one might use LibCPP to detect things like this
automatically, but let's do this one step after another.
In 7c5e30daaa, the focus was "only" on
Userland/Libraries/, whereas this commit cleans up the remaining
headers in the repo, and any new badly-formatted include.
The class is very similar to `CircularDuplexStream` in its behavior.
Main differences are that `CircularBuffer`:
- does not inherit from `AK::Stream`
- uses `ErrorOr` for its API
- is heap allocated (and OOM-Safe)
This patch also add some tests.
This file does not contain any architecture specific implementations,
so we can move it to the Kernel base directory. Also update the relevant
include paths.
Mark other ErrorOr types as friends, and fix a typo in the &&
constructor, so that we can create an ErrorOr<Core::Object> from an
ErrorOr<GUI::Widget>. Also, add some requires() clauses to these
constructors so the error messages are clearer.
Previously any backslash and the character following it were ignored.
This commit adds a fall through to match the character following the
backslash without checking whether it is "special".
This allows callers to use the following semantics:
using MyVariant = Variant<Empty, int>;
template<typename T>
size_t size() { return TypeList<T>::size; }
auto s = size<MyVariant>();
This will be needed for an upcoming IPC change, which will result in us
knowing the Variant type, but not the underlying variadic types that the
Variant holds.
This shrinks sizeof(Error) from 32 bytes to 24 bytes, which in turn will
shrink sizeof(ErrorOr<T>) by the same amount (in cases where sizeof(T)
is less than sizeof(Error)).
Instead of avoiding overflow-checking builtins with AK_COMPILER_CLANG,
we can use the preprocessor's __has_builtin() mechanism to check if
they are available.
`OwnPtrWithCustomDeleter` was a decorator which provided the ability
to add a custom deleter to `OwnPtr` by wrapping and taking the deleter
as a run-time argument to the constructor. This solution means that no
additional space is needed for the `OwnPtr` because it doesn't need to
store a pointer to the deleter, but comes at the cost of having an
extra type that stores a pointer for every instance.
This logic is moved directly into `OwnPtr` by adding a template
argument that is defaulted to the default deleter for the type. This
means that the type itself stores the pointer to the deleter instead
of every instance and adds some type safety by encoding the deleter in
the type itself instead of taking a run-time argument.
This class is a smart pointer that let you provide a custom deleter to
free the pointer.
It is quite primitive compared to other smart pointers but can still be
useful when interacting with C types that provides a custom `free()`
function.
This was removed in a910961f37d1da9dafb6385e348266746354cf98 in favour
of the more general USING_AK_GLOBALLY #define, but Ladybird (and
probably other projects) depend on the smaller hammer to include STL
headers and keep the USING_AK_GLOBALLY behaviour, so put it back and
preserve its behaviour.
Note that this still keeps the old behaviour of putting things in std by
default on serenity so the tools can be happy, but if USING_AK_GLOBALLY
is unset, AK behaves like a good citizen and doesn't try to put things
in the ::std namespace.
std::nothrow_t and its friends get to stay because I'm being told that
compilers assume things about them and I can't yeet them into a
different namespace...for now.
A couple headers expected names to be in the global namespace, qualify
those names to make sure they're resolved even when the names are not
exported.
One header placed its functions in the global namespace, move those to
the AK namespace to make the concepts resolve.
Implement insertion sort in AK. The cutoff value 7 is a magic number
here, values [5, 15] should work well. Main idea of the cutoff is to
reduce recursion performed by quicksort to speed up sorting
of small partitions.