On 12/19/2010 01:44 PM, Andrei Alexandrescu wrote:
On 12/19/10 10:35 AM, Ary Borenszweig wrote:
On 12/19/2010 01:21 PM, Andrei Alexandrescu wrote:
On 12/19/10 9:32 AM, Ary Borenszweig wrote:
I have this code:

---
import std.stdio;

int foobar(int delegate(int) f) {
return f(1);
}

int foobar2(string s)() {
int x = 1;
mixin("return " ~ s ~ ";");
}

void main() {
writefln("%d", foobar((int x) { return 2*x; }));
writefln("%d", foobar2!("9876*x"));
}
---

When I compile it with -O -inline I can see with obj2asm that for the
first writefln the delegate is being called. However, for the second
it just passes
9876 to writefln.

From this I can say many things:
- It seems that if I want hyper-high performance in my code I must use
string mixins because delegate calls, even if they are very simple and
the
functions that uses them are also very simple, are not inlined. This
has the drawback that each call to foobar2 with a different string
will generate a
different method in the object file.

You forgot:

writefln("%d", foobar2!((x) { return 2*x; })());

That's a real delegate, not a string, but it will be inlined.


Andrei

Sorry, I don't understand. I tried these:

1.
int foobar3(int delegate(int) f)() {
return f(1);
}

writefln("%d", foobar3!((int x) { return 2*x; })());

=> foo.d(12): Error: arithmetic/string type expected for
value-parameter, not int delegate(int)

2.
int foobar3()(int delegate(int) f) {
return f(1);
}

writefln("%d", foobar3!()((int x) { return 2*x; }));

=> Works, but it doesn't get inlined.

And I tried that "(x) { ... }" syntax and it doesn't work.

Sorry, it must be my fault I'm doing something wrong. What's the correct
way of writing optimized code in D, code that I'm sure the compiler will
know how to optimize?

void foobar3(alias fun)() {
return fun(1);
}


Andrei

This of course has the following problem:

int foobar2(int delegate(int x) f) {
}

foobar2((int x, int y) { ... });

Error: function foobar2 (int delegate(int) f) is not callable using argument types (int delegate(int x, int y))

---

int foobar3(alias f)() {
  f(1);
}

foobar3((x, y) { ... });

foo.d(8): Error: template foo.main.__dgliteral1(__T2,__T3) does not match any function template declaration foo.d(8): Error: template foo.main.__dgliteral1(__T2,__T3) cannot deduce template function from argument types !()(int) foo.d(12): Error: template instance foo.main.foobar3!(__dgliteral1) error instantiating

So I have to go to foo.d(8) to see what the problem is, understand what is being invoked (in this case it was easy but it get can harder), or otherwise say "Hey, the one that implemented foo, please do a static assert msg if f is not what you expect". Basically "Implement the error message that the compiler would have given you for free if you didn't use a template".

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