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authorChris Lattner <sabre@nondot.org>2008-01-14 06:27:57 +0000
committerChris Lattner <sabre@nondot.org>2008-01-14 06:27:57 +0000
commitd9028b7d7d9a63a87608ec3fd870a22b2cc87891 (patch)
treeecbb9f9632c41b197de7a0c3f124388057f0acda /NOTES.txt
parent1adb88370beab45af2f065afe86b51ccd59ec50d (diff)
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git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/cfe/trunk@45953 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
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@@ -28,6 +28,32 @@ Extensions:
//===---------------------------------------------------------------------===//
+When we go to reimplement <tgmath.h>, we should do it more intelligently than
+the GCC-supplied header. EDG has an interesting __generic builtin that provides
+overloading for C:
+http://www.edg.com/docs/edg_cpp.pdf
+
+For example, they have:
+ #define sin(x) __generic(x,,, sin, sinf, sinl, csin, csinf,csinl)(x)
+
+It's unclear to me why you couldn't just have a builtin like:
+ __builtin_overload(1, arg1, impl1, impl2, impl3)
+ __builtin_overload(2, arg1, arg2, impl1, impl2, impl3)
+ __builtin_overload(3, arg1, arg2, arg3, impl1, impl2, impl3)
+
+Where the compiler would just pick the right "impl" based on the arguments
+provided. One nasty detail is that some arithmetic promotions most be done for
+use by the tgmath.h stuff, but it would be nice to be able to handle vectors
+etc as well without huge globs of macros. With the above scheme, you could
+use:
+
+ #define sin(x) __builtin_overload(1, x, sin, sinf, sinl, csin, csinf,csinl)(x)
+
+and not need to keep track of which argument to "__generic" corresponds to which
+type, etc.
+
+//===---------------------------------------------------------------------===//
+
To time GCC preprocessing speed without output, use:
"time gcc -MM file"
This is similar to -Eonly.