Am 11.03.2013 14:43, schrieb Jonas Maebe:
On 11 Mar 2013, at 14:32, Daniel Gaspary wrote:
In my case the enum has near 600 elements.
TMyEnum = (me1, me2...);
The set though would never be used to contain more than 256.
TMySet = set of TMyEnum;
Is it not viable to modify the compiler to compile the code and raise
an exception if I try to add more than 256 elements to the set ?
A set is basically a bitpacked array of boolean. Element X is set to
true if you add X to the set, and to false if you remove it again.
That means that if you have a set with 600 possible values, you need
at least 600 bits, regardless of how many elements are inside it.
The above also shows an alternative to sets in that case: you can use
a bitpacked array[TMyEnum] of boolean instead. Of course, then you
can't use the regular set operators.
If the array is a named one (e.g. "TMyArraySet = bitpacked
array[TMyEnum] of Boolean") then operator overloading could be used...
Regards,
Sven
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