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authordmalcolm <dmalcolm@138bc75d-0d04-0410-961f-82ee72b054a4>2015-07-01 12:41:18 +0000
committerdmalcolm <dmalcolm@138bc75d-0d04-0410-961f-82ee72b054a4>2015-07-01 12:41:18 +0000
commiteb2d3e4a67c699257e42280e6bf800b8a92ffad7 (patch)
tree36d17c826bc20c8daf08911f9ec380f7a09ad4de /gcc/jit/docs/_build/texinfo/libgccjit.texi
parent1fa42b0566972abc668f3aa88e5534092af99c2c (diff)
downloadgcc-eb2d3e4a67c699257e42280e6bf800b8a92ffad7.tar.gz
jit: document union types
gcc/jit/ChangeLog: * docs/topics/types.rst (gcc_jit_context_new_union_type): Add documentation. * docs/_build/texinfo/libgccjit.texi: Regenerate. gcc/testsuite/ChangeLog: * jit.dg/test-accessing-union.c: Add comments for use by gcc/jit/docs/topics/types.rst. git-svn-id: svn+ssh://gcc.gnu.org/svn/gcc/trunk@225246 138bc75d-0d04-0410-961f-82ee72b054a4
Diffstat (limited to 'gcc/jit/docs/_build/texinfo/libgccjit.texi')
-rw-r--r--gcc/jit/docs/_build/texinfo/libgccjit.texi881
1 files changed, 486 insertions, 395 deletions
diff --git a/gcc/jit/docs/_build/texinfo/libgccjit.texi b/gcc/jit/docs/_build/texinfo/libgccjit.texi
index f6ab632688d..bcb8066218a 100644
--- a/gcc/jit/docs/_build/texinfo/libgccjit.texi
+++ b/gcc/jit/docs/_build/texinfo/libgccjit.texi
@@ -6138,6 +6138,97 @@ Populate the fields of a formerly-opaque struct type.
This can only be called once on a given struct type.
@end deffn
+@geindex gcc_jit_context_new_union_type (C function)
+@anchor{topics/types gcc_jit_context_new_union_type}@anchor{87}
+@deffn {C Function} gcc_jit_type * gcc_jit_context_new_union_type (gcc_jit_context@w{ }*ctxt, gcc_jit_location@w{ }*loc, const char@w{ }*name, int@w{ }num_fields, gcc_jit_field@w{ }**fields)
+
+Construct a new union type, with the given name and fields.
+
+The parameter @code{name} must be non-NULL. It is copied, so the input
+buffer does not need to outlive the call.
+
+Example of use:
+
+@example
+
+union int_or_float
+@{
+ int as_int;
+ float as_float;
+@};
+
+void
+create_code (gcc_jit_context *ctxt, void *user_data)
+@{
+ /* Let's try to inject the equivalent of:
+ float
+ test_union (int i)
+ @{
+ union int_or_float u;
+ u.as_int = i;
+ return u.as_float;
+ @}
+ */
+ gcc_jit_type *int_type =
+ gcc_jit_context_get_type (ctxt, GCC_JIT_TYPE_INT);
+ gcc_jit_type *float_type =
+ gcc_jit_context_get_type (ctxt, GCC_JIT_TYPE_FLOAT);
+ gcc_jit_field *as_int =
+ gcc_jit_context_new_field (ctxt,
+ NULL,
+ int_type,
+ "as_int");
+ gcc_jit_field *as_float =
+ gcc_jit_context_new_field (ctxt,
+ NULL,
+ float_type,
+ "as_float");
+ gcc_jit_field *fields[] = @{as_int, as_float@};
+ gcc_jit_type *union_type =
+ gcc_jit_context_new_union_type (ctxt, NULL,
+ "int_or_float", 2, fields);
+
+ /* Build the test function. */
+ gcc_jit_param *param_i =
+ gcc_jit_context_new_param (ctxt, NULL, int_type, "i");
+ gcc_jit_function *test_fn =
+ gcc_jit_context_new_function (ctxt, NULL,
+ GCC_JIT_FUNCTION_EXPORTED,
+ float_type,
+ "test_union",
+ 1, &param_i,
+ 0);
+
+ gcc_jit_lvalue *u =
+ gcc_jit_function_new_local (test_fn, NULL,
+ union_type, "u");
+
+ gcc_jit_block *block = gcc_jit_function_new_block (test_fn, NULL);
+
+ /* u.as_int = i; */
+ gcc_jit_block_add_assignment (
+ block,
+ NULL,
+ /* "u.as_int = ..." */
+ gcc_jit_lvalue_access_field (u,
+ NULL,
+ as_int),
+ gcc_jit_param_as_rvalue (param_i));
+
+ /* return u.as_float; */
+ gcc_jit_block_end_with_return (
+ block, NULL,
+ gcc_jit_rvalue_access_field (gcc_jit_lvalue_as_rvalue (u),
+ NULL,
+ as_float));
+@}
+
+
+@end example
+
+@noindent
+@end deffn
+
@c Copyright (C) 2014-2015 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
@c Originally contributed by David Malcolm <dmalcolm@redhat.com>
@c
@@ -6156,7 +6247,7 @@ This can only be called once on a given struct type.
@c <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
@node Expressions,Creating and using functions,Types,Topic Reference
-@anchor{topics/expressions expressions}@anchor{87}@anchor{topics/expressions doc}@anchor{88}
+@anchor{topics/expressions expressions}@anchor{88}@anchor{topics/expressions doc}@anchor{89}
@section Expressions
@@ -6182,7 +6273,7 @@ Lvalues
@node Rvalues,Lvalues,,Expressions
-@anchor{topics/expressions rvalues}@anchor{89}
+@anchor{topics/expressions rvalues}@anchor{8a}
@subsection Rvalues
@@ -6236,7 +6327,7 @@ Every rvalue has an associated type, and the API will check to ensure
that types match up correctly (otherwise the context will emit an error).
@geindex gcc_jit_rvalue_get_type (C function)
-@anchor{topics/expressions gcc_jit_rvalue_get_type}@anchor{8a}
+@anchor{topics/expressions gcc_jit_rvalue_get_type}@anchor{8b}
@deffn {C Function} gcc_jit_type *gcc_jit_rvalue_get_type (gcc_jit_rvalue@w{ }*rvalue)
Get the type of this rvalue.
@@ -6260,7 +6351,7 @@ Upcast the given rvalue to be an object.
@end menu
@node Simple expressions,Unary Operations,,Rvalues
-@anchor{topics/expressions simple-expressions}@anchor{8b}
+@anchor{topics/expressions simple-expressions}@anchor{8c}
@subsubsection Simple expressions
@@ -6273,7 +6364,7 @@ the given constant @code{int} value.
@end deffn
@geindex gcc_jit_context_new_rvalue_from_long (C function)
-@anchor{topics/expressions gcc_jit_context_new_rvalue_from_long}@anchor{8c}
+@anchor{topics/expressions gcc_jit_context_new_rvalue_from_long}@anchor{8d}
@deffn {C Function} gcc_jit_rvalue * gcc_jit_context_new_rvalue_from_long (gcc_jit_context@w{ }*ctxt, gcc_jit_type@w{ }*numeric_type, long@w{ }value)
Given a numeric type (integer or floating point), build an rvalue for
@@ -6317,14 +6408,14 @@ the given constant @code{double} value.
@end deffn
@geindex gcc_jit_context_new_rvalue_from_ptr (C function)
-@anchor{topics/expressions gcc_jit_context_new_rvalue_from_ptr}@anchor{8d}
+@anchor{topics/expressions gcc_jit_context_new_rvalue_from_ptr}@anchor{8e}
@deffn {C Function} gcc_jit_rvalue * gcc_jit_context_new_rvalue_from_ptr (gcc_jit_context@w{ }*ctxt, gcc_jit_type@w{ }*pointer_type, void@w{ }*value)
Given a pointer type, build an rvalue for the given address.
@end deffn
@geindex gcc_jit_context_null (C function)
-@anchor{topics/expressions gcc_jit_context_null}@anchor{8e}
+@anchor{topics/expressions gcc_jit_context_null}@anchor{8f}
@deffn {C Function} gcc_jit_rvalue *gcc_jit_context_null (gcc_jit_context@w{ }*ctxt, gcc_jit_type@w{ }*pointer_type)
Given a pointer type, build an rvalue for @code{NULL}. Essentially this
@@ -6338,7 +6429,7 @@ gcc_jit_context_new_rvalue_from_ptr (ctxt, pointer_type, NULL)
@end deffn
@geindex gcc_jit_context_new_string_literal (C function)
-@anchor{topics/expressions gcc_jit_context_new_string_literal}@anchor{8f}
+@anchor{topics/expressions gcc_jit_context_new_string_literal}@anchor{90}
@deffn {C Function} gcc_jit_rvalue * gcc_jit_context_new_string_literal (gcc_jit_context@w{ }*ctxt, const char@w{ }*value)
Generate an rvalue for the given NIL-terminated string, of type
@@ -6350,19 +6441,19 @@ buffer.
@end deffn
@node Unary Operations,Binary Operations,Simple expressions,Rvalues
-@anchor{topics/expressions unary-operations}@anchor{90}
+@anchor{topics/expressions unary-operations}@anchor{91}
@subsubsection Unary Operations
@geindex gcc_jit_context_new_unary_op (C function)
-@anchor{topics/expressions gcc_jit_context_new_unary_op}@anchor{91}
+@anchor{topics/expressions gcc_jit_context_new_unary_op}@anchor{92}
@deffn {C Function} gcc_jit_rvalue * gcc_jit_context_new_unary_op (gcc_jit_context@w{ }*ctxt, gcc_jit_location@w{ }*loc, enum gcc_jit_unary_op@w{ }op, gcc_jit_type@w{ }*result_type, gcc_jit_rvalue@w{ }*rvalue)
Build a unary operation out of an input rvalue.
@end deffn
@geindex gcc_jit_unary_op (C type)
-@anchor{topics/expressions gcc_jit_unary_op}@anchor{92}
+@anchor{topics/expressions gcc_jit_unary_op}@anchor{93}
@deffn {C Type} enum gcc_jit_unary_op
@end deffn
@@ -6380,7 +6471,7 @@ C equivalent
@item
-@pxref{93,,GCC_JIT_UNARY_OP_MINUS}
+@pxref{94,,GCC_JIT_UNARY_OP_MINUS}
@tab
@@ -6388,7 +6479,7 @@ C equivalent
@item
-@pxref{94,,GCC_JIT_UNARY_OP_BITWISE_NEGATE}
+@pxref{95,,GCC_JIT_UNARY_OP_BITWISE_NEGATE}
@tab
@@ -6396,7 +6487,7 @@ C equivalent
@item
-@pxref{95,,GCC_JIT_UNARY_OP_LOGICAL_NEGATE}
+@pxref{96,,GCC_JIT_UNARY_OP_LOGICAL_NEGATE}
@tab
@@ -6404,7 +6495,7 @@ C equivalent
@item
-@pxref{96,,GCC_JIT_UNARY_OP_ABS}
+@pxref{97,,GCC_JIT_UNARY_OP_ABS}
@tab
@@ -6414,7 +6505,7 @@ C equivalent
@geindex GCC_JIT_UNARY_OP_MINUS (C macro)
-@anchor{topics/expressions GCC_JIT_UNARY_OP_MINUS}@anchor{93}
+@anchor{topics/expressions GCC_JIT_UNARY_OP_MINUS}@anchor{94}
@deffn {C Macro} GCC_JIT_UNARY_OP_MINUS
Negate an arithmetic value; analogous to:
@@ -6429,7 +6520,7 @@ in C.
@end deffn
@geindex GCC_JIT_UNARY_OP_BITWISE_NEGATE (C macro)
-@anchor{topics/expressions GCC_JIT_UNARY_OP_BITWISE_NEGATE}@anchor{94}
+@anchor{topics/expressions GCC_JIT_UNARY_OP_BITWISE_NEGATE}@anchor{95}
@deffn {C Macro} GCC_JIT_UNARY_OP_BITWISE_NEGATE
Bitwise negation of an integer value (one's complement); analogous
@@ -6445,7 +6536,7 @@ in C.
@end deffn
@geindex GCC_JIT_UNARY_OP_LOGICAL_NEGATE (C macro)
-@anchor{topics/expressions GCC_JIT_UNARY_OP_LOGICAL_NEGATE}@anchor{95}
+@anchor{topics/expressions GCC_JIT_UNARY_OP_LOGICAL_NEGATE}@anchor{96}
@deffn {C Macro} GCC_JIT_UNARY_OP_LOGICAL_NEGATE
Logical negation of an arithmetic or pointer value; analogous to:
@@ -6460,7 +6551,7 @@ in C.
@end deffn
@geindex GCC_JIT_UNARY_OP_ABS (C macro)
-@anchor{topics/expressions GCC_JIT_UNARY_OP_ABS}@anchor{96}
+@anchor{topics/expressions GCC_JIT_UNARY_OP_ABS}@anchor{97}
@deffn {C Macro} GCC_JIT_UNARY_OP_ABS
Absolute value of an arithmetic expression; analogous to:
@@ -6475,7 +6566,7 @@ in C.
@end deffn
@node Binary Operations,Comparisons,Unary Operations,Rvalues
-@anchor{topics/expressions binary-operations}@anchor{97}
+@anchor{topics/expressions binary-operations}@anchor{98}
@subsubsection Binary Operations
@@ -6487,7 +6578,7 @@ Build a binary operation out of two constituent rvalues.
@end deffn
@geindex gcc_jit_binary_op (C type)
-@anchor{topics/expressions gcc_jit_binary_op}@anchor{98}
+@anchor{topics/expressions gcc_jit_binary_op}@anchor{99}
@deffn {C Type} enum gcc_jit_binary_op
@end deffn
@@ -6505,7 +6596,7 @@ C equivalent
@item
-@pxref{99,,GCC_JIT_BINARY_OP_PLUS}
+@pxref{9a,,GCC_JIT_BINARY_OP_PLUS}
@tab
@@ -6513,7 +6604,7 @@ C equivalent
@item
-@pxref{9a,,GCC_JIT_BINARY_OP_MINUS}
+@pxref{9b,,GCC_JIT_BINARY_OP_MINUS}
@tab
@@ -6521,7 +6612,7 @@ C equivalent
@item
-@pxref{9b,,GCC_JIT_BINARY_OP_MULT}
+@pxref{9c,,GCC_JIT_BINARY_OP_MULT}
@tab
@@ -6529,7 +6620,7 @@ C equivalent
@item
-@pxref{9c,,GCC_JIT_BINARY_OP_DIVIDE}
+@pxref{9d,,GCC_JIT_BINARY_OP_DIVIDE}
@tab
@@ -6537,7 +6628,7 @@ C equivalent
@item
-@pxref{9d,,GCC_JIT_BINARY_OP_MODULO}
+@pxref{9e,,GCC_JIT_BINARY_OP_MODULO}
@tab
@@ -6545,7 +6636,7 @@ C equivalent
@item
-@pxref{9e,,GCC_JIT_BINARY_OP_BITWISE_AND}
+@pxref{9f,,GCC_JIT_BINARY_OP_BITWISE_AND}
@tab
@@ -6553,7 +6644,7 @@ C equivalent
@item
-@pxref{9f,,GCC_JIT_BINARY_OP_BITWISE_XOR}
+@pxref{a0,,GCC_JIT_BINARY_OP_BITWISE_XOR}
@tab
@@ -6561,7 +6652,7 @@ C equivalent
@item
-@pxref{a0,,GCC_JIT_BINARY_OP_BITWISE_OR}
+@pxref{a1,,GCC_JIT_BINARY_OP_BITWISE_OR}
@tab
@@ -6569,7 +6660,7 @@ C equivalent
@item
-@pxref{a1,,GCC_JIT_BINARY_OP_LOGICAL_AND}
+@pxref{a2,,GCC_JIT_BINARY_OP_LOGICAL_AND}
@tab
@@ -6577,7 +6668,7 @@ C equivalent
@item
-@pxref{a2,,GCC_JIT_BINARY_OP_LOGICAL_OR}
+@pxref{a3,,GCC_JIT_BINARY_OP_LOGICAL_OR}
@tab
@@ -6585,7 +6676,7 @@ C equivalent
@item
-@pxref{a3,,GCC_JIT_BINARY_OP_LSHIFT}
+@pxref{a4,,GCC_JIT_BINARY_OP_LSHIFT}
@tab
@@ -6593,7 +6684,7 @@ C equivalent
@item
-@pxref{a4,,GCC_JIT_BINARY_OP_RSHIFT}
+@pxref{a5,,GCC_JIT_BINARY_OP_RSHIFT}
@tab
@@ -6603,7 +6694,7 @@ C equivalent
@geindex GCC_JIT_BINARY_OP_PLUS (C macro)
-@anchor{topics/expressions GCC_JIT_BINARY_OP_PLUS}@anchor{99}
+@anchor{topics/expressions GCC_JIT_BINARY_OP_PLUS}@anchor{9a}
@deffn {C Macro} GCC_JIT_BINARY_OP_PLUS
Addition of arithmetic values; analogous to:
@@ -6616,11 +6707,11 @@ Addition of arithmetic values; analogous to:
in C.
-For pointer addition, use @pxref{a5,,gcc_jit_context_new_array_access()}.
+For pointer addition, use @pxref{a6,,gcc_jit_context_new_array_access()}.
@end deffn
@geindex GCC_JIT_BINARY_OP_MINUS (C macro)
-@anchor{topics/expressions GCC_JIT_BINARY_OP_MINUS}@anchor{9a}
+@anchor{topics/expressions GCC_JIT_BINARY_OP_MINUS}@anchor{9b}
@deffn {C Macro} GCC_JIT_BINARY_OP_MINUS
Subtraction of arithmetic values; analogous to:
@@ -6635,7 +6726,7 @@ in C.
@end deffn
@geindex GCC_JIT_BINARY_OP_MULT (C macro)
-@anchor{topics/expressions GCC_JIT_BINARY_OP_MULT}@anchor{9b}
+@anchor{topics/expressions GCC_JIT_BINARY_OP_MULT}@anchor{9c}
@deffn {C Macro} GCC_JIT_BINARY_OP_MULT
Multiplication of a pair of arithmetic values; analogous to:
@@ -6650,7 +6741,7 @@ in C.
@end deffn
@geindex GCC_JIT_BINARY_OP_DIVIDE (C macro)
-@anchor{topics/expressions GCC_JIT_BINARY_OP_DIVIDE}@anchor{9c}
+@anchor{topics/expressions GCC_JIT_BINARY_OP_DIVIDE}@anchor{9d}
@deffn {C Macro} GCC_JIT_BINARY_OP_DIVIDE
Quotient of division of arithmetic values; analogous to:
@@ -6669,7 +6760,7 @@ a floating-point result type indicates floating-point division.
@end deffn
@geindex GCC_JIT_BINARY_OP_MODULO (C macro)
-@anchor{topics/expressions GCC_JIT_BINARY_OP_MODULO}@anchor{9d}
+@anchor{topics/expressions GCC_JIT_BINARY_OP_MODULO}@anchor{9e}
@deffn {C Macro} GCC_JIT_BINARY_OP_MODULO
Remainder of division of arithmetic values; analogous to:
@@ -6684,7 +6775,7 @@ in C.
@end deffn
@geindex GCC_JIT_BINARY_OP_BITWISE_AND (C macro)
-@anchor{topics/expressions GCC_JIT_BINARY_OP_BITWISE_AND}@anchor{9e}
+@anchor{topics/expressions GCC_JIT_BINARY_OP_BITWISE_AND}@anchor{9f}
@deffn {C Macro} GCC_JIT_BINARY_OP_BITWISE_AND
Bitwise AND; analogous to:
@@ -6699,7 +6790,7 @@ in C.
@end deffn
@geindex GCC_JIT_BINARY_OP_BITWISE_XOR (C macro)
-@anchor{topics/expressions GCC_JIT_BINARY_OP_BITWISE_XOR}@anchor{9f}
+@anchor{topics/expressions GCC_JIT_BINARY_OP_BITWISE_XOR}@anchor{a0}
@deffn {C Macro} GCC_JIT_BINARY_OP_BITWISE_XOR
Bitwise exclusive OR; analogous to:
@@ -6714,7 +6805,7 @@ in C.
@end deffn
@geindex GCC_JIT_BINARY_OP_BITWISE_OR (C macro)
-@anchor{topics/expressions GCC_JIT_BINARY_OP_BITWISE_OR}@anchor{a0}
+@anchor{topics/expressions GCC_JIT_BINARY_OP_BITWISE_OR}@anchor{a1}
@deffn {C Macro} GCC_JIT_BINARY_OP_BITWISE_OR
Bitwise inclusive OR; analogous to:
@@ -6729,7 +6820,7 @@ in C.
@end deffn
@geindex GCC_JIT_BINARY_OP_LOGICAL_AND (C macro)
-@anchor{topics/expressions GCC_JIT_BINARY_OP_LOGICAL_AND}@anchor{a1}
+@anchor{topics/expressions GCC_JIT_BINARY_OP_LOGICAL_AND}@anchor{a2}
@deffn {C Macro} GCC_JIT_BINARY_OP_LOGICAL_AND
Logical AND; analogous to:
@@ -6744,7 +6835,7 @@ in C.
@end deffn
@geindex GCC_JIT_BINARY_OP_LOGICAL_OR (C macro)
-@anchor{topics/expressions GCC_JIT_BINARY_OP_LOGICAL_OR}@anchor{a2}
+@anchor{topics/expressions GCC_JIT_BINARY_OP_LOGICAL_OR}@anchor{a3}
@deffn {C Macro} GCC_JIT_BINARY_OP_LOGICAL_OR
Logical OR; analogous to:
@@ -6759,7 +6850,7 @@ in C.
@end deffn
@geindex GCC_JIT_BINARY_OP_LSHIFT (C macro)
-@anchor{topics/expressions GCC_JIT_BINARY_OP_LSHIFT}@anchor{a3}
+@anchor{topics/expressions GCC_JIT_BINARY_OP_LSHIFT}@anchor{a4}
@deffn {C Macro} GCC_JIT_BINARY_OP_LSHIFT
Left shift; analogous to:
@@ -6774,7 +6865,7 @@ in C.
@end deffn
@geindex GCC_JIT_BINARY_OP_RSHIFT (C macro)
-@anchor{topics/expressions GCC_JIT_BINARY_OP_RSHIFT}@anchor{a4}
+@anchor{topics/expressions GCC_JIT_BINARY_OP_RSHIFT}@anchor{a5}
@deffn {C Macro} GCC_JIT_BINARY_OP_RSHIFT
Right shift; analogous to:
@@ -6789,7 +6880,7 @@ in C.
@end deffn
@node Comparisons,Function calls,Binary Operations,Rvalues
-@anchor{topics/expressions comparisons}@anchor{a6}
+@anchor{topics/expressions comparisons}@anchor{a7}
@subsubsection Comparisons
@@ -6801,7 +6892,7 @@ Build a boolean rvalue out of the comparison of two other rvalues.
@end deffn
@geindex gcc_jit_comparison (C type)
-@anchor{topics/expressions gcc_jit_comparison}@anchor{a7}
+@anchor{topics/expressions gcc_jit_comparison}@anchor{a8}
@deffn {C Type} enum gcc_jit_comparison
@end deffn
@@ -6867,12 +6958,12 @@ C equivalent
@node Function calls,Type-coercion,Comparisons,Rvalues
-@anchor{topics/expressions function-calls}@anchor{a8}
+@anchor{topics/expressions function-calls}@anchor{a9}
@subsubsection Function calls
@geindex gcc_jit_context_new_call (C function)
-@anchor{topics/expressions gcc_jit_context_new_call}@anchor{a9}
+@anchor{topics/expressions gcc_jit_context_new_call}@anchor{aa}
@deffn {C Function} gcc_jit_rvalue * gcc_jit_context_new_call (gcc_jit_context@w{ }*ctxt, gcc_jit_location@w{ }*loc, gcc_jit_function@w{ }*func, int@w{ }numargs, gcc_jit_rvalue@w{ }**args)
Given a function and the given table of argument rvalues, construct a
@@ -6880,7 +6971,7 @@ call to the function, with the result as an rvalue.
@cartouche
@quotation Note
-@pxref{a9,,gcc_jit_context_new_call()} merely builds a
+@pxref{aa,,gcc_jit_context_new_call()} merely builds a
@pxref{13,,gcc_jit_rvalue} i.e. an expression that can be evaluated,
perhaps as part of a more complicated expression.
The call @emph{won't} happen unless you add a statement to a function
@@ -6888,7 +6979,7 @@ that evaluates the expression.
For example, if you want to call a function and discard the result
(or to call a function with @code{void} return type), use
-@pxref{aa,,gcc_jit_block_add_eval()}:
+@pxref{ab,,gcc_jit_block_add_eval()}:
@example
/* Add "(void)printf (arg0, arg1);". */
@@ -6907,12 +6998,12 @@ gcc_jit_block_add_eval (
@end deffn
@node Type-coercion,,Function calls,Rvalues
-@anchor{topics/expressions type-coercion}@anchor{ab}
+@anchor{topics/expressions type-coercion}@anchor{ac}
@subsubsection Type-coercion
@geindex gcc_jit_context_new_cast (C function)
-@anchor{topics/expressions gcc_jit_context_new_cast}@anchor{ac}
+@anchor{topics/expressions gcc_jit_context_new_cast}@anchor{ad}
@deffn {C Function} gcc_jit_rvalue * gcc_jit_context_new_cast (gcc_jit_context@w{ }*ctxt, gcc_jit_location@w{ }*loc, gcc_jit_rvalue@w{ }*rvalue, gcc_jit_type@w{ }*type)
Given an rvalue of T, construct another rvalue of another type.
@@ -6937,7 +7028,7 @@ P* <-> Q*, for pointer types P and Q
@end deffn
@node Lvalues,Working with pointers structs and unions,Rvalues,Expressions
-@anchor{topics/expressions lvalues}@anchor{ad}
+@anchor{topics/expressions lvalues}@anchor{ae}
@subsection Lvalues
@@ -6951,21 +7042,21 @@ a storage area (such as a variable). It is also usable as an rvalue,
where the rvalue is computed by reading from the storage area.
@geindex gcc_jit_lvalue_as_object (C function)
-@anchor{topics/expressions gcc_jit_lvalue_as_object}@anchor{ae}
+@anchor{topics/expressions gcc_jit_lvalue_as_object}@anchor{af}
@deffn {C Function} gcc_jit_object * gcc_jit_lvalue_as_object (gcc_jit_lvalue@w{ }*lvalue)
Upcast an lvalue to be an object.
@end deffn
@geindex gcc_jit_lvalue_as_rvalue (C function)
-@anchor{topics/expressions gcc_jit_lvalue_as_rvalue}@anchor{af}
+@anchor{topics/expressions gcc_jit_lvalue_as_rvalue}@anchor{b0}
@deffn {C Function} gcc_jit_rvalue * gcc_jit_lvalue_as_rvalue (gcc_jit_lvalue@w{ }*lvalue)
Upcast an lvalue to be an rvalue.
@end deffn
@geindex gcc_jit_lvalue_get_address (C function)
-@anchor{topics/expressions gcc_jit_lvalue_get_address}@anchor{b0}
+@anchor{topics/expressions gcc_jit_lvalue_get_address}@anchor{b1}
@deffn {C Function} gcc_jit_rvalue * gcc_jit_lvalue_get_address (gcc_jit_lvalue@w{ }*lvalue, gcc_jit_location@w{ }*loc)
Take the address of an lvalue; analogous to:
@@ -6985,12 +7076,12 @@ in C.
@end menu
@node Global variables,,,Lvalues
-@anchor{topics/expressions global-variables}@anchor{b1}
+@anchor{topics/expressions global-variables}@anchor{b2}
@subsubsection Global variables
@geindex gcc_jit_context_new_global (C function)
-@anchor{topics/expressions gcc_jit_context_new_global}@anchor{b2}
+@anchor{topics/expressions gcc_jit_context_new_global}@anchor{b3}
@deffn {C Function} gcc_jit_lvalue * gcc_jit_context_new_global (gcc_jit_context@w{ }*ctxt, gcc_jit_location@w{ }*loc, enum gcc_jit_global_kind@w{ }kind, gcc_jit_type@w{ }*type, const char@w{ }*name)
Add a new global variable of the given type and name to the context.
@@ -7003,22 +7094,22 @@ The "kind" parameter determines the visibility of the "global" outside
of the @pxref{16,,gcc_jit_result}:
@geindex gcc_jit_global_kind (C type)
-@anchor{topics/expressions gcc_jit_global_kind}@anchor{b3}
+@anchor{topics/expressions gcc_jit_global_kind}@anchor{b4}
@deffn {C Type} enum gcc_jit_global_kind
@end deffn
@geindex GCC_JIT_GLOBAL_EXPORTED (C macro)
-@anchor{topics/expressions GCC_JIT_GLOBAL_EXPORTED}@anchor{b4}
+@anchor{topics/expressions GCC_JIT_GLOBAL_EXPORTED}@anchor{b5}
@deffn {C Macro} GCC_JIT_GLOBAL_EXPORTED
Global is defined by the client code and is visible
by name outside of this JIT context via
-@pxref{b5,,gcc_jit_result_get_global()} (and this value is required for
+@pxref{b6,,gcc_jit_result_get_global()} (and this value is required for
the global to be accessible via that entrypoint).
@end deffn
@geindex GCC_JIT_GLOBAL_INTERNAL (C macro)
-@anchor{topics/expressions GCC_JIT_GLOBAL_INTERNAL}@anchor{b6}
+@anchor{topics/expressions GCC_JIT_GLOBAL_INTERNAL}@anchor{b7}
@deffn {C Macro} GCC_JIT_GLOBAL_INTERNAL
Global is defined by the client code, but is invisible
@@ -7028,7 +7119,7 @@ context and within child contexts.
@end deffn
@geindex GCC_JIT_GLOBAL_IMPORTED (C macro)
-@anchor{topics/expressions GCC_JIT_GLOBAL_IMPORTED}@anchor{b7}
+@anchor{topics/expressions GCC_JIT_GLOBAL_IMPORTED}@anchor{b8}
@deffn {C Macro} GCC_JIT_GLOBAL_IMPORTED
Global is not defined by the client code; we're merely
@@ -7038,12 +7129,12 @@ header file.
@end deffn
@node Working with pointers structs and unions,,Lvalues,Expressions
-@anchor{topics/expressions working-with-pointers-structs-and-unions}@anchor{b8}
+@anchor{topics/expressions working-with-pointers-structs-and-unions}@anchor{b9}
@subsection Working with pointers, structs and unions
@geindex gcc_jit_rvalue_dereference (C function)
-@anchor{topics/expressions gcc_jit_rvalue_dereference}@anchor{b9}
+@anchor{topics/expressions gcc_jit_rvalue_dereference}@anchor{ba}
@deffn {C Function} gcc_jit_lvalue * gcc_jit_rvalue_dereference (gcc_jit_rvalue@w{ }*rvalue, gcc_jit_location@w{ }*loc)
Given an rvalue of pointer type @code{T *}, dereferencing the pointer,
@@ -7061,7 +7152,7 @@ in C.
Field access is provided separately for both lvalues and rvalues.
@geindex gcc_jit_lvalue_access_field (C function)
-@anchor{topics/expressions gcc_jit_lvalue_access_field}@anchor{ba}
+@anchor{topics/expressions gcc_jit_lvalue_access_field}@anchor{bb}
@deffn {C Function} gcc_jit_lvalue * gcc_jit_lvalue_access_field (gcc_jit_lvalue@w{ }*struct_, gcc_jit_location@w{ }*loc, gcc_jit_field@w{ }*field)
Given an lvalue of struct or union type, access the given field,
@@ -7077,7 +7168,7 @@ in C.
@end deffn
@geindex gcc_jit_rvalue_access_field (C function)
-@anchor{topics/expressions gcc_jit_rvalue_access_field}@anchor{bb}
+@anchor{topics/expressions gcc_jit_rvalue_access_field}@anchor{bc}
@deffn {C Function} gcc_jit_rvalue * gcc_jit_rvalue_access_field (gcc_jit_rvalue@w{ }*struct_, gcc_jit_location@w{ }*loc, gcc_jit_field@w{ }*field)
Given an rvalue of struct or union type, access the given field
@@ -7093,7 +7184,7 @@ in C.
@end deffn
@geindex gcc_jit_rvalue_dereference_field (C function)
-@anchor{topics/expressions gcc_jit_rvalue_dereference_field}@anchor{bc}
+@anchor{topics/expressions gcc_jit_rvalue_dereference_field}@anchor{bd}
@deffn {C Function} gcc_jit_lvalue * gcc_jit_rvalue_dereference_field (gcc_jit_rvalue@w{ }*ptr, gcc_jit_location@w{ }*loc, gcc_jit_field@w{ }*field)
Given an rvalue of pointer type @code{T *} where T is of struct or union
@@ -7109,7 +7200,7 @@ in C, itself equivalent to @code{(*EXPR).FIELD}.
@end deffn
@geindex gcc_jit_context_new_array_access (C function)
-@anchor{topics/expressions gcc_jit_context_new_array_access}@anchor{a5}
+@anchor{topics/expressions gcc_jit_context_new_array_access}@anchor{a6}
@deffn {C Function} gcc_jit_lvalue * gcc_jit_context_new_array_access (gcc_jit_context@w{ }*ctxt, gcc_jit_location@w{ }*loc, gcc_jit_rvalue@w{ }*ptr, gcc_jit_rvalue@w{ }*index)
Given an rvalue of pointer type @code{T *}, get at the element @cite{T} at
@@ -7144,7 +7235,7 @@ in C (or, indeed, to @code{PTR + INDEX}).
@c <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
@node Creating and using functions,Source Locations,Expressions,Topic Reference
-@anchor{topics/functions doc}@anchor{bd}@anchor{topics/functions creating-and-using-functions}@anchor{be}
+@anchor{topics/functions doc}@anchor{be}@anchor{topics/functions creating-and-using-functions}@anchor{bf}
@section Creating and using functions
@@ -7157,7 +7248,7 @@ in C (or, indeed, to @code{PTR + INDEX}).
@end menu
@node Params,Functions,,Creating and using functions
-@anchor{topics/functions params}@anchor{bf}
+@anchor{topics/functions params}@anchor{c0}
@subsection Params
@@ -7184,28 +7275,28 @@ Parameters are lvalues, and thus are also rvalues (and objects), so the
following upcasts are available:
@geindex gcc_jit_param_as_lvalue (C function)
-@anchor{topics/functions gcc_jit_param_as_lvalue}@anchor{c0}
+@anchor{topics/functions gcc_jit_param_as_lvalue}@anchor{c1}
@deffn {C Function} gcc_jit_lvalue * gcc_jit_param_as_lvalue (gcc_jit_param@w{ }*param)
Upcasting from param to lvalue.
@end deffn
@geindex gcc_jit_param_as_rvalue (C function)
-@anchor{topics/functions gcc_jit_param_as_rvalue}@anchor{c1}
+@anchor{topics/functions gcc_jit_param_as_rvalue}@anchor{c2}
@deffn {C Function} gcc_jit_rvalue * gcc_jit_param_as_rvalue (gcc_jit_param@w{ }*param)
Upcasting from param to rvalue.
@end deffn
@geindex gcc_jit_param_as_object (C function)
-@anchor{topics/functions gcc_jit_param_as_object}@anchor{c2}
+@anchor{topics/functions gcc_jit_param_as_object}@anchor{c3}
@deffn {C Function} gcc_jit_object * gcc_jit_param_as_object (gcc_jit_param@w{ }*param)
Upcasting from param to object.
@end deffn
@node Functions,Blocks,Params,Creating and using functions
-@anchor{topics/functions functions}@anchor{c3}
+@anchor{topics/functions functions}@anchor{c4}
@subsection Functions
@@ -7224,7 +7315,7 @@ creating ourselves, or one that we're referencing.
Create a gcc_jit_function with the given name and parameters.
@geindex gcc_jit_function_kind (C type)
-@anchor{topics/functions gcc_jit_function_kind}@anchor{c4}
+@anchor{topics/functions gcc_jit_function_kind}@anchor{c5}
@deffn {C Type} enum gcc_jit_function_kind
@end deffn
@@ -7234,7 +7325,7 @@ values:
@quotation
@geindex GCC_JIT_FUNCTION_EXPORTED (C macro)
-@anchor{topics/functions GCC_JIT_FUNCTION_EXPORTED}@anchor{c5}
+@anchor{topics/functions GCC_JIT_FUNCTION_EXPORTED}@anchor{c6}
@deffn {C Macro} GCC_JIT_FUNCTION_EXPORTED
Function is defined by the client code and visible
@@ -7246,7 +7337,7 @@ for this function from a @pxref{16,,gcc_jit_result} via
@end deffn
@geindex GCC_JIT_FUNCTION_INTERNAL (C macro)
-@anchor{topics/functions GCC_JIT_FUNCTION_INTERNAL}@anchor{c6}
+@anchor{topics/functions GCC_JIT_FUNCTION_INTERNAL}@anchor{c7}
@deffn {C Macro} GCC_JIT_FUNCTION_INTERNAL
Function is defined by the client code, but is invisible
@@ -7254,7 +7345,7 @@ outside of the JIT. Analogous to a "static" function.
@end deffn
@geindex GCC_JIT_FUNCTION_IMPORTED (C macro)
-@anchor{topics/functions GCC_JIT_FUNCTION_IMPORTED}@anchor{c7}
+@anchor{topics/functions GCC_JIT_FUNCTION_IMPORTED}@anchor{c8}
@deffn {C Macro} GCC_JIT_FUNCTION_IMPORTED
Function is not defined by the client code; we're merely
@@ -7263,7 +7354,7 @@ header file.
@end deffn
@geindex GCC_JIT_FUNCTION_ALWAYS_INLINE (C macro)
-@anchor{topics/functions GCC_JIT_FUNCTION_ALWAYS_INLINE}@anchor{c8}
+@anchor{topics/functions GCC_JIT_FUNCTION_ALWAYS_INLINE}@anchor{c9}
@deffn {C Macro} GCC_JIT_FUNCTION_ALWAYS_INLINE
Function is only ever inlined into other functions, and is
@@ -7284,19 +7375,19 @@ buffer.
@end deffn
@geindex gcc_jit_context_get_builtin_function (C function)
-@anchor{topics/functions gcc_jit_context_get_builtin_function}@anchor{c9}
+@anchor{topics/functions gcc_jit_context_get_builtin_function}@anchor{ca}
@deffn {C Function} gcc_jit_function *gcc_jit_context_get_builtin_function (gcc_jit_context@w{ }*ctxt, const char@w{ }*name)
@end deffn
@geindex gcc_jit_function_as_object (C function)
-@anchor{topics/functions gcc_jit_function_as_object}@anchor{ca}
+@anchor{topics/functions gcc_jit_function_as_object}@anchor{cb}
@deffn {C Function} gcc_jit_object * gcc_jit_function_as_object (gcc_jit_function@w{ }*func)
Upcasting from function to object.
@end deffn
@geindex gcc_jit_function_get_param (C function)
-@anchor{topics/functions gcc_jit_function_get_param}@anchor{cb}
+@anchor{topics/functions gcc_jit_function_get_param}@anchor{cc}
@deffn {C Function} gcc_jit_param * gcc_jit_function_get_param (gcc_jit_function@w{ }*func, int@w{ }index)
Get the param of the given index (0-based).
@@ -7322,7 +7413,7 @@ buffer.
@end deffn
@node Blocks,Statements,Functions,Creating and using functions
-@anchor{topics/functions blocks}@anchor{cc}
+@anchor{topics/functions blocks}@anchor{cd}
@subsection Blocks
@@ -7346,7 +7437,7 @@ one function.
@end deffn
@geindex gcc_jit_function_new_block (C function)
-@anchor{topics/functions gcc_jit_function_new_block}@anchor{cd}
+@anchor{topics/functions gcc_jit_function_new_block}@anchor{ce}
@deffn {C Function} gcc_jit_block * gcc_jit_function_new_block (gcc_jit_function@w{ }*func, const char@w{ }*name)
Create a basic block of the given name. The name may be NULL, but
@@ -7368,26 +7459,26 @@ for (pc = 0; pc < fn->fn_num_ops; pc++)
@end deffn
@geindex gcc_jit_block_as_object (C function)
-@anchor{topics/functions gcc_jit_block_as_object}@anchor{ce}
+@anchor{topics/functions gcc_jit_block_as_object}@anchor{cf}
@deffn {C Function} gcc_jit_object * gcc_jit_block_as_object (gcc_jit_block@w{ }*block)
Upcast from block to object.
@end deffn
@geindex gcc_jit_block_get_function (C function)
-@anchor{topics/functions gcc_jit_block_get_function}@anchor{cf}
+@anchor{topics/functions gcc_jit_block_get_function}@anchor{d0}
@deffn {C Function} gcc_jit_function * gcc_jit_block_get_function (gcc_jit_block@w{ }*block)
Which function is this block within?
@end deffn
@node Statements,,Blocks,Creating and using functions
-@anchor{topics/functions statements}@anchor{d0}
+@anchor{topics/functions statements}@anchor{d1}
@subsection Statements
@geindex gcc_jit_block_add_eval (C function)
-@anchor{topics/functions gcc_jit_block_add_eval}@anchor{aa}
+@anchor{topics/functions gcc_jit_block_add_eval}@anchor{ab}
@deffn {C Function} void gcc_jit_block_add_eval (gcc_jit_block@w{ }*block, gcc_jit_location@w{ }*loc, gcc_jit_rvalue@w{ }*rvalue)
Add evaluation of an rvalue, discarding the result
@@ -7496,7 +7587,7 @@ block, boolval, on_true, and on_false must be non-NULL.
@end deffn
@geindex gcc_jit_block_end_with_jump (C function)
-@anchor{topics/functions gcc_jit_block_end_with_jump}@anchor{d1}
+@anchor{topics/functions gcc_jit_block_end_with_jump}@anchor{d2}
@deffn {C Function} void gcc_jit_block_end_with_jump (gcc_jit_block@w{ }*block, gcc_jit_location@w{ }*loc, gcc_jit_block@w{ }*target)
Terminate a block by adding a jump to the given target block.
@@ -7511,7 +7602,7 @@ goto target;
@end deffn
@geindex gcc_jit_block_end_with_return (C function)
-@anchor{topics/functions gcc_jit_block_end_with_return}@anchor{d2}
+@anchor{topics/functions gcc_jit_block_end_with_return}@anchor{d3}
@deffn {C Function} void gcc_jit_block_end_with_return (gcc_jit_block@w{ }*block, gcc_jit_location@w{ }*loc, gcc_jit_rvalue@w{ }*rvalue)
Terminate a block by adding evaluation of an rvalue, returning the value.
@@ -7526,7 +7617,7 @@ return expression;
@end deffn
@geindex gcc_jit_block_end_with_void_return (C function)
-@anchor{topics/functions gcc_jit_block_end_with_void_return}@anchor{d3}
+@anchor{topics/functions gcc_jit_block_end_with_void_return}@anchor{d4}
@deffn {C Function} void gcc_jit_block_end_with_void_return (gcc_jit_block@w{ }*block, gcc_jit_location@w{ }*loc)
Terminate a block by adding a valueless return, for use within a function
@@ -7542,7 +7633,7 @@ return;
@end deffn
@geindex gcc_jit_block_end_with_switch (C function)
-@anchor{topics/functions gcc_jit_block_end_with_switch}@anchor{d4}
+@anchor{topics/functions gcc_jit_block_end_with_switch}@anchor{d5}
@deffn {C Function} void gcc_jit_block_end_with_switch (gcc_jit_block@w{ }*block, gcc_jit_location@w{ }*loc, gcc_jit_rvalue@w{ }*expr, gcc_jit_block@w{ }*default_block, int@w{ }num_cases, gcc_jit_case@w{ }**cases)
Terminate a block by adding evalation of an rvalue, then performing
@@ -7590,17 +7681,17 @@ The API entrypoints relating to switch statements and cases:
@itemize *
@item
-@pxref{d4,,gcc_jit_block_end_with_switch()}
+@pxref{d5,,gcc_jit_block_end_with_switch()}
@item
-@pxref{d5,,gcc_jit_case_as_object()}
+@pxref{d6,,gcc_jit_case_as_object()}
@item
-@pxref{d6,,gcc_jit_context_new_case()}
+@pxref{d7,,gcc_jit_context_new_case()}
@end itemize
@end quotation
-were added in @pxref{d7,,LIBGCCJIT_ABI_3}; you can test for their presence
+were added in @pxref{d8,,LIBGCCJIT_ABI_3}; you can test for their presence
using
@example
@@ -7610,20 +7701,20 @@ using
@noindent
@geindex gcc_jit_case (C type)
-@anchor{topics/functions gcc_jit_case}@anchor{d8}
+@anchor{topics/functions gcc_jit_case}@anchor{d9}
@deffn {C Type} gcc_jit_case
@end deffn
A @cite{gcc_jit_case} represents a case within a switch statement, and
is created within a particular @pxref{8,,gcc_jit_context} using
-@pxref{d6,,gcc_jit_context_new_case()}.
+@pxref{d7,,gcc_jit_context_new_case()}.
Each case expresses a multivalued range of integer values. You
can express single-valued cases by passing in the same value for
both @cite{min_value} and @cite{max_value}.
@geindex gcc_jit_context_new_case (C function)
-@anchor{topics/functions gcc_jit_context_new_case}@anchor{d6}
+@anchor{topics/functions gcc_jit_context_new_case}@anchor{d7}
@deffn {C Function} gcc_jit_case * gcc_jit_context_new_case (gcc_jit_context@w{ }*ctxt, gcc_jit_rvalue@w{ }*min_value, gcc_jit_rvalue@w{ }*max_value, gcc_jit_block@w{ }*dest_block)
Create a new gcc_jit_case instance for use in a switch statement.
@@ -7635,7 +7726,7 @@ statement.
@end deffn
@geindex gcc_jit_case_as_object (C function)
-@anchor{topics/functions gcc_jit_case_as_object}@anchor{d5}
+@anchor{topics/functions gcc_jit_case_as_object}@anchor{d6}
@deffn {C Function} gcc_jit_object * gcc_jit_case_as_object (gcc_jit_case@w{ }*case_)
Upcast from a case to an object.
@@ -7770,7 +7861,7 @@ create_code (gcc_jit_context *ctxt, void *user_data)
@c <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
@node Source Locations,Compiling a context,Creating and using functions,Topic Reference
-@anchor{topics/locations source-locations}@anchor{d9}@anchor{topics/locations doc}@anchor{da}
+@anchor{topics/locations source-locations}@anchor{da}@anchor{topics/locations doc}@anchor{db}
@section Source Locations
@@ -7820,7 +7911,7 @@ on-stack buffer.
@end menu
@node Faking it,,,Source Locations
-@anchor{topics/locations faking-it}@anchor{db}
+@anchor{topics/locations faking-it}@anchor{dc}
@subsection Faking it
@@ -7858,7 +7949,7 @@ file, giving you @emph{something} you can step through in the debugger.
@c <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
@node Compiling a context,ABI and API compatibility,Source Locations,Topic Reference
-@anchor{topics/compilation compiling-a-context}@anchor{dc}@anchor{topics/compilation doc}@anchor{dd}
+@anchor{topics/compilation compiling-a-context}@anchor{dd}@anchor{topics/compilation doc}@anchor{de}
@section Compiling a context
@@ -7877,7 +7968,7 @@ prevent any future compilation of that context.
@end menu
@node In-memory compilation,Ahead-of-time compilation,,Compiling a context
-@anchor{topics/compilation in-memory-compilation}@anchor{de}
+@anchor{topics/compilation in-memory-compilation}@anchor{df}
@subsection In-memory compilation
@@ -7912,7 +8003,7 @@ Functions are looked up by name. For this to succeed, a function
with a name matching @cite{funcname} must have been created on
@cite{result}'s context (or a parent context) via a call to
@pxref{11,,gcc_jit_context_new_function()} with @cite{kind}
-@pxref{c5,,GCC_JIT_FUNCTION_EXPORTED}:
+@pxref{c6,,GCC_JIT_FUNCTION_EXPORTED}:
@example
gcc_jit_context_new_function (ctxt,
@@ -7942,7 +8033,7 @@ to a segmentation fault.
@end deffn
@geindex gcc_jit_result_get_global (C function)
-@anchor{topics/compilation gcc_jit_result_get_global}@anchor{b5}
+@anchor{topics/compilation gcc_jit_result_get_global}@anchor{b6}
@deffn {C Function} void * gcc_jit_result_get_global (gcc_jit_result@w{ }*result, const char@w{ }*name)
Locate a given global within the built machine code.
@@ -7950,8 +8041,8 @@ Locate a given global within the built machine code.
Globals are looked up by name. For this to succeed, a global
with a name matching @cite{name} must have been created on
@cite{result}'s context (or a parent context) via a call to
-@pxref{b2,,gcc_jit_context_new_global()} with @cite{kind}
-@pxref{b4,,GCC_JIT_GLOBAL_EXPORTED}.
+@pxref{b3,,gcc_jit_context_new_global()} with @cite{kind}
+@pxref{b5,,GCC_JIT_GLOBAL_EXPORTED}.
If the global is found, the result will need to be cast to a
pointer of the correct type before it can be called.
@@ -7999,11 +8090,11 @@ Once we're done with the code, this unloads the built .so file.
This cleans up the result; after calling this, it's no longer
valid to use the result, or any code or globals that were obtained
by calling @pxref{17,,gcc_jit_result_get_code()} or
-@pxref{b5,,gcc_jit_result_get_global()} on it.
+@pxref{b6,,gcc_jit_result_get_global()} on it.
@end deffn
@node Ahead-of-time compilation,,In-memory compilation,Compiling a context
-@anchor{topics/compilation ahead-of-time-compilation}@anchor{df}
+@anchor{topics/compilation ahead-of-time-compilation}@anchor{e0}
@subsection Ahead-of-time compilation
@@ -8032,7 +8123,7 @@ suffix of the output file when determining what to do.
@end cartouche
@geindex gcc_jit_output_kind (C type)
-@anchor{topics/compilation gcc_jit_output_kind}@anchor{e0}
+@anchor{topics/compilation gcc_jit_output_kind}@anchor{e1}
@deffn {C Type} enum gcc_jit_output_kind
@end deffn
@@ -8050,7 +8141,7 @@ Typical suffix
@item
-@pxref{e1,,GCC_JIT_OUTPUT_KIND_ASSEMBLER}
+@pxref{e2,,GCC_JIT_OUTPUT_KIND_ASSEMBLER}
@tab
@@ -8058,7 +8149,7 @@ Typical suffix
@item
-@pxref{e2,,GCC_JIT_OUTPUT_KIND_OBJECT_FILE}
+@pxref{e3,,GCC_JIT_OUTPUT_KIND_OBJECT_FILE}
@tab
@@ -8066,7 +8157,7 @@ Typical suffix
@item
-@pxref{e3,,GCC_JIT_OUTPUT_KIND_DYNAMIC_LIBRARY}
+@pxref{e4,,GCC_JIT_OUTPUT_KIND_DYNAMIC_LIBRARY}
@tab
@@ -8074,7 +8165,7 @@ Typical suffix
@item
-@pxref{e4,,GCC_JIT_OUTPUT_KIND_EXECUTABLE}
+@pxref{e5,,GCC_JIT_OUTPUT_KIND_EXECUTABLE}
@tab
@@ -8084,21 +8175,21 @@ None, or .exe
@geindex GCC_JIT_OUTPUT_KIND_ASSEMBLER (C macro)
-@anchor{topics/compilation GCC_JIT_OUTPUT_KIND_ASSEMBLER}@anchor{e1}
+@anchor{topics/compilation GCC_JIT_OUTPUT_KIND_ASSEMBLER}@anchor{e2}
@deffn {C Macro} GCC_JIT_OUTPUT_KIND_ASSEMBLER
Compile the context to an assembler file.
@end deffn
@geindex GCC_JIT_OUTPUT_KIND_OBJECT_FILE (C macro)
-@anchor{topics/compilation GCC_JIT_OUTPUT_KIND_OBJECT_FILE}@anchor{e2}
+@anchor{topics/compilation GCC_JIT_OUTPUT_KIND_OBJECT_FILE}@anchor{e3}
@deffn {C Macro} GCC_JIT_OUTPUT_KIND_OBJECT_FILE
Compile the context to an object file.
@end deffn
@geindex GCC_JIT_OUTPUT_KIND_DYNAMIC_LIBRARY (C macro)
-@anchor{topics/compilation GCC_JIT_OUTPUT_KIND_DYNAMIC_LIBRARY}@anchor{e3}
+@anchor{topics/compilation GCC_JIT_OUTPUT_KIND_DYNAMIC_LIBRARY}@anchor{e4}
@deffn {C Macro} GCC_JIT_OUTPUT_KIND_DYNAMIC_LIBRARY
Compile the context to a dynamic library.
@@ -8108,7 +8199,7 @@ against.
@end deffn
@geindex GCC_JIT_OUTPUT_KIND_EXECUTABLE (C macro)
-@anchor{topics/compilation GCC_JIT_OUTPUT_KIND_EXECUTABLE}@anchor{e4}
+@anchor{topics/compilation GCC_JIT_OUTPUT_KIND_EXECUTABLE}@anchor{e5}
@deffn {C Macro} GCC_JIT_OUTPUT_KIND_EXECUTABLE
Compile the context to an executable.
@@ -8135,7 +8226,7 @@ against.
@c <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
@node ABI and API compatibility,,Compiling a context,Topic Reference
-@anchor{topics/compatibility abi-and-api-compatibility}@anchor{e5}@anchor{topics/compatibility doc}@anchor{e6}
+@anchor{topics/compatibility abi-and-api-compatibility}@anchor{e6}@anchor{topics/compatibility doc}@anchor{e7}
@section ABI and API compatibility
@@ -8202,7 +8293,7 @@ ABI symbol tags
@node ABI symbol tags,,,ABI and API compatibility
-@anchor{topics/compatibility abi-symbol-tags}@anchor{e7}
+@anchor{topics/compatibility abi-symbol-tags}@anchor{e8}
@subsection ABI symbol tags
@@ -8219,7 +8310,7 @@ Newer releases use the following tags.
@end menu
@node LIBGCCJIT_ABI_0,LIBGCCJIT_ABI_1,,ABI symbol tags
-@anchor{topics/compatibility libgccjit-abi-0}@anchor{e8}@anchor{topics/compatibility id1}@anchor{e9}
+@anchor{topics/compatibility libgccjit-abi-0}@anchor{e9}@anchor{topics/compatibility id1}@anchor{ea}
@subsubsection @code{LIBGCCJIT_ABI_0}
@@ -8231,7 +8322,7 @@ continue to work, with this being handled transparently by the linker
(see this post@footnote{https://gcc.gnu.org/ml/gcc-patches/2015-06/msg02126.html})
@node LIBGCCJIT_ABI_1,LIBGCCJIT_ABI_2,LIBGCCJIT_ABI_0,ABI symbol tags
-@anchor{topics/compatibility libgccjit-abi-1}@anchor{71}@anchor{topics/compatibility id2}@anchor{ea}
+@anchor{topics/compatibility libgccjit-abi-1}@anchor{71}@anchor{topics/compatibility id2}@anchor{eb}
@subsubsection @code{LIBGCCJIT_ABI_1}
@@ -8239,7 +8330,7 @@ continue to work, with this being handled transparently by the linker
@pxref{70,,gcc_jit_context_add_command_line_option()}
@node LIBGCCJIT_ABI_2,LIBGCCJIT_ABI_3,LIBGCCJIT_ABI_1,ABI symbol tags
-@anchor{topics/compatibility libgccjit-abi-2}@anchor{6c}@anchor{topics/compatibility id3}@anchor{eb}
+@anchor{topics/compatibility libgccjit-abi-2}@anchor{6c}@anchor{topics/compatibility id3}@anchor{ec}
@subsubsection @code{LIBGCCJIT_ABI_2}
@@ -8247,7 +8338,7 @@ continue to work, with this being handled transparently by the linker
@pxref{6b,,gcc_jit_context_set_bool_allow_unreachable_blocks()}
@node LIBGCCJIT_ABI_3,,LIBGCCJIT_ABI_2,ABI symbol tags
-@anchor{topics/compatibility libgccjit-abi-3}@anchor{d7}@anchor{topics/compatibility id4}@anchor{ec}
+@anchor{topics/compatibility libgccjit-abi-3}@anchor{d8}@anchor{topics/compatibility id4}@anchor{ed}
@subsubsection @code{LIBGCCJIT_ABI_3}
@@ -8260,13 +8351,13 @@ entrypoints:
@itemize *
@item
-@pxref{d4,,gcc_jit_block_end_with_switch()}
+@pxref{d5,,gcc_jit_block_end_with_switch()}
@item
-@pxref{d5,,gcc_jit_case_as_object()}
+@pxref{d6,,gcc_jit_case_as_object()}
@item
-@pxref{d6,,gcc_jit_context_new_case()}
+@pxref{d7,,gcc_jit_context_new_case()}
@end itemize
@end quotation
@@ -8288,7 +8379,7 @@ entrypoints:
@c <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
@node C++ bindings for libgccjit,Internals,Topic Reference,Top
-@anchor{cp/index c-bindings-for-libgccjit}@anchor{ed}@anchor{cp/index doc}@anchor{ee}
+@anchor{cp/index c-bindings-for-libgccjit}@anchor{ee}@anchor{cp/index doc}@anchor{ef}
@chapter C++ bindings for libgccjit
@@ -8436,7 +8527,7 @@ Compiling a context
@node Tutorial<2>,Topic Reference<2>,,C++ bindings for libgccjit
-@anchor{cp/intro/index doc}@anchor{ef}@anchor{cp/intro/index tutorial}@anchor{f0}
+@anchor{cp/intro/index doc}@anchor{f0}@anchor{cp/intro/index tutorial}@anchor{f1}
@section Tutorial
@@ -8466,7 +8557,7 @@ Compiling a context
@end menu
@node Tutorial part 1 "Hello world"<2>,Tutorial part 2 Creating a trivial machine code function<2>,,Tutorial<2>
-@anchor{cp/intro/tutorial01 doc}@anchor{f1}@anchor{cp/intro/tutorial01 tutorial-part-1-hello-world}@anchor{f2}
+@anchor{cp/intro/tutorial01 doc}@anchor{f2}@anchor{cp/intro/tutorial01 tutorial-part-1-hello-world}@anchor{f3}
@subsection Tutorial part 1: "Hello world"
@@ -8636,7 +8727,7 @@ hello world
@c <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
@node Tutorial part 2 Creating a trivial machine code function<2>,Tutorial part 3 Loops and variables<2>,Tutorial part 1 "Hello world"<2>,Tutorial<2>
-@anchor{cp/intro/tutorial02 doc}@anchor{f3}@anchor{cp/intro/tutorial02 tutorial-part-2-creating-a-trivial-machine-code-function}@anchor{f4}
+@anchor{cp/intro/tutorial02 doc}@anchor{f4}@anchor{cp/intro/tutorial02 tutorial-part-2-creating-a-trivial-machine-code-function}@anchor{f5}
@subsection Tutorial part 2: Creating a trivial machine code function
@@ -8665,7 +8756,7 @@ All state associated with compilation is associated with a
@code{gccjit::context}, which is a thin C++ wrapper around the C API's
@pxref{8,,gcc_jit_context *}.
-Create one using @pxref{f5,,gccjit;;context;;acquire()}:
+Create one using @pxref{f6,,gccjit;;context;;acquire()}:
@example
gccjit::context ctxt;
@@ -8678,7 +8769,7 @@ The JIT library has a system of types. It is statically-typed: every
expression is of a specific type, fixed at compile-time. In our example,
all of the expressions are of the C @cite{int} type, so let's obtain this from
the context, as a @code{gccjit::type}, using
-@pxref{f6,,gccjit;;context;;get_type()}:
+@pxref{f7,,gccjit;;context;;get_type()}:
@example
gccjit::type int_type = ctxt.get_type (GCC_JIT_TYPE_INT);
@@ -8691,7 +8782,7 @@ entity in the API is associated with a @code{gccjit::context}.
Memory management is easy: all such "contextual" objects are automatically
cleaned up for you when the context is released, using
-@pxref{f7,,gccjit;;context;;release()}:
+@pxref{f8,,gccjit;;context;;release()}:
@example
ctxt.release ();
@@ -8724,7 +8815,7 @@ The C++ class hierarchy within the @code{gccjit} namespace looks like this:
One thing you can do with a @code{gccjit::object} is
to ask it for a human-readable description as a @code{std::string}, using
-@pxref{f8,,gccjit;;object;;get_debug_string()}:
+@pxref{f9,,gccjit;;object;;get_debug_string()}:
@example
printf ("obj: %s\n", obj.get_debug_string ().c_str ());
@@ -8744,7 +8835,7 @@ This is invaluable when debugging.
Let's create the function. To do so, we first need to construct
its single parameter, specifying its type and giving it a name,
-using @pxref{f9,,gccjit;;context;;new_param()}:
+using @pxref{fa,,gccjit;;context;;new_param()}:
@example
gccjit::param param_i = ctxt.new_param (int_type, "i");
@@ -8793,7 +8884,7 @@ gccjit::block block = func.new_block ();
Our basic block is relatively simple: it immediately terminates by
returning the value of an expression.
-We can build the expression using @pxref{fa,,gccjit;;context;;new_binary_op()}:
+We can build the expression using @pxref{fb,,gccjit;;context;;new_binary_op()}:
@example
gccjit::rvalue expr =
@@ -8806,7 +8897,7 @@ gccjit::rvalue expr =
A @code{gccjit::rvalue} is another example of a
@code{gccjit::object} subclass. As before, we can print it with
-@pxref{f8,,gccjit;;object;;get_debug_string()}.
+@pxref{f9,,gccjit;;object;;get_debug_string()}.
@example
printf ("expr: %s\n", expr.get_debug_string ().c_str ());
@@ -8843,7 +8934,7 @@ block.end_with_return (expr);
@noindent
OK, we've populated the context. We can now compile it using
-@pxref{fb,,gccjit;;context;;compile()}:
+@pxref{fc,,gccjit;;context;;compile()}:
@example
gcc_jit_result *result;
@@ -8893,12 +8984,12 @@ result: 25
@end menu
@node Options<3>,Full example<3>,,Tutorial part 2 Creating a trivial machine code function<2>
-@anchor{cp/intro/tutorial02 options}@anchor{fc}
+@anchor{cp/intro/tutorial02 options}@anchor{fd}
@subsubsection Options
To get more information on what's going on, you can set debugging flags
-on the context using @pxref{fd,,gccjit;;context;;set_bool_option()}.
+on the context using @pxref{fe,,gccjit;;context;;set_bool_option()}.
@c (I'm deliberately not mentioning
@c :c:macro:`GCC_JIT_BOOL_OPTION_DUMP_INITIAL_TREE` here since I think
@@ -8970,7 +9061,7 @@ square:
By default, no optimizations are performed, the equivalent of GCC's
@cite{-O0} option. We can turn things up to e.g. @cite{-O3} by calling
-@pxref{fe,,gccjit;;context;;set_int_option()} with
+@pxref{ff,,gccjit;;context;;set_int_option()} with
@pxref{1f,,GCC_JIT_INT_OPTION_OPTIMIZATION_LEVEL}:
@example
@@ -9004,7 +9095,7 @@ square:
Naturally this has only a small effect on such a trivial function.
@node Full example<3>,,Options<3>,Tutorial part 2 Creating a trivial machine code function<2>
-@anchor{cp/intro/tutorial02 full-example}@anchor{ff}
+@anchor{cp/intro/tutorial02 full-example}@anchor{100}
@subsubsection Full example
@@ -9147,7 +9238,7 @@ result: 25
@c <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
@node Tutorial part 3 Loops and variables<2>,Tutorial part 4 Adding JIT-compilation to a toy interpreter<2>,Tutorial part 2 Creating a trivial machine code function<2>,Tutorial<2>
-@anchor{cp/intro/tutorial03 tutorial-part-3-loops-and-variables}@anchor{100}@anchor{cp/intro/tutorial03 doc}@anchor{101}
+@anchor{cp/intro/tutorial03 tutorial-part-3-loops-and-variables}@anchor{101}@anchor{cp/intro/tutorial03 doc}@anchor{102}
@subsection Tutorial part 3: Loops and variables
@@ -9271,7 +9362,7 @@ gccjit::function func =
@end menu
@node Expressions lvalues and rvalues<2>,Control flow<2>,,Tutorial part 3 Loops and variables<2>
-@anchor{cp/intro/tutorial03 expressions-lvalues-and-rvalues}@anchor{102}
+@anchor{cp/intro/tutorial03 expressions-lvalues-and-rvalues}@anchor{103}
@subsubsection Expressions: lvalues and rvalues
@@ -9344,7 +9435,7 @@ body of a function.
Our new example has a new kind of expression: we have two local
variables. We create them by calling
-@pxref{103,,gccjit;;function;;new_local()}, supplying a type and a name:
+@pxref{104,,gccjit;;function;;new_local()}, supplying a type and a name:
@example
/* Build locals: */
@@ -9370,7 +9461,7 @@ Instead, having added the local to the function, we have to separately add
an assignment of @cite{0} to @cite{local_i} at the beginning of the function.
@node Control flow<2>,Visualizing the control flow graph<2>,Expressions lvalues and rvalues<2>,Tutorial part 3 Loops and variables<2>
-@anchor{cp/intro/tutorial03 control-flow}@anchor{104}
+@anchor{cp/intro/tutorial03 control-flow}@anchor{105}
@subsubsection Control flow
@@ -9409,8 +9500,8 @@ We now populate each block with statements.
The entry block @cite{b_initial} consists of initializations followed by a jump
to the conditional. We assign @cite{0} to @cite{i} and to @cite{sum}, using
-@pxref{105,,gccjit;;block;;add_assignment()} to add
-an assignment statement, and using @pxref{106,,gccjit;;context;;zero()} to get
+@pxref{106,,gccjit;;block;;add_assignment()} to add
+an assignment statement, and using @pxref{107,,gccjit;;context;;zero()} to get
the constant value @cite{0} for the relevant type for the right-hand side of
the assignment:
@@ -9437,7 +9528,7 @@ C example. It contains a single statement: a conditional, which jumps to
one of two destination blocks depending on a boolean
@code{gccjit::rvalue}, in this case the comparison of @cite{i} and @cite{n}.
-We could build the comparison using @pxref{107,,gccjit;;context;;new_comparison()}:
+We could build the comparison using @pxref{108,,gccjit;;context;;new_comparison()}:
@example
gccjit::rvalue guard =
@@ -9448,7 +9539,7 @@ gccjit::rvalue guard =
@noindent
and can then use this to add @cite{b_loop_cond}'s sole statement, via
-@pxref{108,,gccjit;;block;;end_with_conditional()}:
+@pxref{109,,gccjit;;block;;end_with_conditional()}:
@example
b_loop_cond.end_with_conditional (guard,
@@ -9482,7 +9573,7 @@ Next, we populate the body of the loop.
The C statement @cite{sum += i * i;} is an assignment operation, where an
lvalue is modified "in-place". We use
-@pxref{109,,gccjit;;block;;add_assignment_op()} to handle these operations:
+@pxref{10a,,gccjit;;block;;add_assignment_op()} to handle these operations:
@example
/* sum += i * i */
@@ -9510,7 +9601,7 @@ b_loop_body.add_assignment_op (i,
@cartouche
@quotation Note
For numeric constants other than 0 or 1, we could use
-@pxref{10a,,gccjit;;context;;new_rvalue()}, which has overloads
+@pxref{10b,,gccjit;;context;;new_rvalue()}, which has overloads
for both @code{int} and @code{double}.
@end quotation
@end cartouche
@@ -9586,12 +9677,12 @@ result: 285
@noindent
@node Visualizing the control flow graph<2>,Full example<4>,Control flow<2>,Tutorial part 3 Loops and variables<2>
-@anchor{cp/intro/tutorial03 visualizing-the-control-flow-graph}@anchor{10b}
+@anchor{cp/intro/tutorial03 visualizing-the-control-flow-graph}@anchor{10c}
@subsubsection Visualizing the control flow graph
You can see the control flow graph of a function using
-@pxref{10c,,gccjit;;function;;dump_to_dot()}:
+@pxref{10d,,gccjit;;function;;dump_to_dot()}:
@example
func.dump_to_dot ("/tmp/sum-of-squares.dot");
@@ -9625,7 +9716,7 @@ install it with @cite{yum install python-xdot}):
@end quotation
@node Full example<4>,,Visualizing the control flow graph<2>,Tutorial part 3 Loops and variables<2>
-@anchor{cp/intro/tutorial03 full-example}@anchor{10d}
+@anchor{cp/intro/tutorial03 full-example}@anchor{10e}
@subsubsection Full example
@@ -9808,7 +9899,7 @@ loop_test returned: 285
@c <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
@node Tutorial part 4 Adding JIT-compilation to a toy interpreter<2>,,Tutorial part 3 Loops and variables<2>,Tutorial<2>
-@anchor{cp/intro/tutorial04 tutorial-part-4-adding-jit-compilation-to-a-toy-interpreter}@anchor{10e}@anchor{cp/intro/tutorial04 doc}@anchor{10f}
+@anchor{cp/intro/tutorial04 tutorial-part-4-adding-jit-compilation-to-a-toy-interpreter}@anchor{10f}@anchor{cp/intro/tutorial04 doc}@anchor{110}
@subsection Tutorial part 4: Adding JIT-compilation to a toy interpreter
@@ -9830,7 +9921,7 @@ to it.
@end menu
@node Our toy interpreter<2>,Compiling to machine code<2>,,Tutorial part 4 Adding JIT-compilation to a toy interpreter<2>
-@anchor{cp/intro/tutorial04 our-toy-interpreter}@anchor{110}
+@anchor{cp/intro/tutorial04 our-toy-interpreter}@anchor{111}
@subsubsection Our toy interpreter
@@ -10238,7 +10329,7 @@ toyvm_function::interpret (int arg, FILE *trace)
@end quotation
@node Compiling to machine code<2>,Setting things up<2>,Our toy interpreter<2>,Tutorial part 4 Adding JIT-compilation to a toy interpreter<2>
-@anchor{cp/intro/tutorial04 compiling-to-machine-code}@anchor{111}
+@anchor{cp/intro/tutorial04 compiling-to-machine-code}@anchor{112}
@subsubsection Compiling to machine code
@@ -10318,7 +10409,7 @@ This means our compiler has the following state:
@end quotation
@node Setting things up<2>,Populating the function<2>,Compiling to machine code<2>,Tutorial part 4 Adding JIT-compilation to a toy interpreter<2>
-@anchor{cp/intro/tutorial04 setting-things-up}@anchor{112}
+@anchor{cp/intro/tutorial04 setting-things-up}@anchor{113}
@subsubsection Setting things up
@@ -10486,7 +10577,7 @@ We create the locals within the function.
@end quotation
@node Populating the function<2>,Verifying the control flow graph<2>,Setting things up<2>,Tutorial part 4 Adding JIT-compilation to a toy interpreter<2>
-@anchor{cp/intro/tutorial04 populating-the-function}@anchor{113}
+@anchor{cp/intro/tutorial04 populating-the-function}@anchor{114}
@subsubsection Populating the function
@@ -10614,7 +10705,7 @@ stack into @code{y} instead erroneously assigned it to @code{x}, leaving @code{y
uninitialized.
To track this kind of thing down, we can use
-@pxref{114,,gccjit;;block;;add_comment()} to add descriptive comments
+@pxref{115,,gccjit;;block;;add_comment()} to add descriptive comments
to the internal representation. This is invaluable when looking through
the generated IR for, say @code{factorial}:
@@ -10763,14 +10854,14 @@ to the next block.
This is analogous to simply incrementing the program counter.
@node Verifying the control flow graph<2>,Compiling the context<2>,Populating the function<2>,Tutorial part 4 Adding JIT-compilation to a toy interpreter<2>
-@anchor{cp/intro/tutorial04 verifying-the-control-flow-graph}@anchor{115}
+@anchor{cp/intro/tutorial04 verifying-the-control-flow-graph}@anchor{116}
@subsubsection Verifying the control flow graph
Having finished looping over the blocks, the context is complete.
As before, we can verify that the control flow and statements are sane by
-using @pxref{10c,,gccjit;;function;;dump_to_dot()}:
+using @pxref{10d,,gccjit;;function;;dump_to_dot()}:
@example
fn.dump_to_dot ("/tmp/factorial.dot");
@@ -10794,7 +10885,7 @@ errors in our compiler.
@end quotation
@node Compiling the context<2>,Single-stepping through the generated code<2>,Verifying the control flow graph<2>,Tutorial part 4 Adding JIT-compilation to a toy interpreter<2>
-@anchor{cp/intro/tutorial04 compiling-the-context}@anchor{116}
+@anchor{cp/intro/tutorial04 compiling-the-context}@anchor{117}
@subsubsection Compiling the context
@@ -10831,7 +10922,7 @@ We can now run the result:
@end quotation
@node Single-stepping through the generated code<2>,Examining the generated code<2>,Compiling the context<2>,Tutorial part 4 Adding JIT-compilation to a toy interpreter<2>
-@anchor{cp/intro/tutorial04 single-stepping-through-the-generated-code}@anchor{117}
+@anchor{cp/intro/tutorial04 single-stepping-through-the-generated-code}@anchor{118}
@subsubsection Single-stepping through the generated code
@@ -10845,14 +10936,14 @@ It's possible to debug the generated code. To do this we need to both:
@item
Set up source code locations for our statements, so that we can
meaningfully step through the code. We did this above by
-calling @pxref{118,,gccjit;;context;;new_location()} and using the
+calling @pxref{119,,gccjit;;context;;new_location()} and using the
results.
@item
Enable the generation of debugging information, by setting
@pxref{42,,GCC_JIT_BOOL_OPTION_DEBUGINFO} on the
@code{gccjit::context} via
-@pxref{fd,,gccjit;;context;;set_bool_option()}:
+@pxref{fe,,gccjit;;context;;set_bool_option()}:
@example
ctxt.set_bool_option (GCC_JIT_BOOL_OPTION_DEBUGINFO, 1);
@@ -10924,14 +11015,14 @@ optimization level in a regular compiler.
@end cartouche
@node Examining the generated code<2>,Putting it all together<2>,Single-stepping through the generated code<2>,Tutorial part 4 Adding JIT-compilation to a toy interpreter<2>
-@anchor{cp/intro/tutorial04 examining-the-generated-code}@anchor{119}
+@anchor{cp/intro/tutorial04 examining-the-generated-code}@anchor{11a}
@subsubsection Examining the generated code
How good is the optimized code?
We can turn up optimizations, by calling
-@pxref{fe,,gccjit;;context;;set_int_option()} with
+@pxref{ff,,gccjit;;context;;set_int_option()} with
@pxref{1f,,GCC_JIT_INT_OPTION_OPTIMIZATION_LEVEL}:
@example
@@ -11113,7 +11204,7 @@ Note that the stack pushing and popping have been eliminated, as has the
recursive call (in favor of an iteration).
@node Putting it all together<2>,Behind the curtain How does our code get optimized?<2>,Examining the generated code<2>,Tutorial part 4 Adding JIT-compilation to a toy interpreter<2>
-@anchor{cp/intro/tutorial04 putting-it-all-together}@anchor{11a}
+@anchor{cp/intro/tutorial04 putting-it-all-together}@anchor{11b}
@subsubsection Putting it all together
@@ -11146,7 +11237,7 @@ compiler result: 55
@noindent
@node Behind the curtain How does our code get optimized?<2>,,Putting it all together<2>,Tutorial part 4 Adding JIT-compilation to a toy interpreter<2>
-@anchor{cp/intro/tutorial04 behind-the-curtain-how-does-our-code-get-optimized}@anchor{11b}
+@anchor{cp/intro/tutorial04 behind-the-curtain-how-does-our-code-get-optimized}@anchor{11c}
@subsubsection Behind the curtain: How does our code get optimized?
@@ -11347,7 +11438,7 @@ representation: @code{initial}, @code{instr4} and @code{instr9}.
@end menu
@node Optimizing away stack manipulation<2>,Elimination of tail recursion<2>,,Behind the curtain How does our code get optimized?<2>
-@anchor{cp/intro/tutorial04 optimizing-away-stack-manipulation}@anchor{11c}
+@anchor{cp/intro/tutorial04 optimizing-away-stack-manipulation}@anchor{11d}
@subsubsection Optimizing away stack manipulation
@@ -11627,7 +11718,7 @@ instr9:
@noindent
@node Elimination of tail recursion<2>,,Optimizing away stack manipulation<2>,Behind the curtain How does our code get optimized?<2>
-@anchor{cp/intro/tutorial04 elimination-of-tail-recursion}@anchor{11d}
+@anchor{cp/intro/tutorial04 elimination-of-tail-recursion}@anchor{11e}
@subsubsection Elimination of tail recursion
@@ -11714,7 +11805,7 @@ instr9:
@c <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
@node Topic Reference<2>,,Tutorial<2>,C++ bindings for libgccjit
-@anchor{cp/topics/index doc}@anchor{11e}@anchor{cp/topics/index topic-reference}@anchor{11f}
+@anchor{cp/topics/index doc}@anchor{11f}@anchor{cp/topics/index topic-reference}@anchor{120}
@section Topic Reference
@@ -11804,22 +11895,22 @@ Compiling a context
@node Compilation contexts<2>,Objects<2>,,Topic Reference<2>
-@anchor{cp/topics/contexts compilation-contexts}@anchor{120}@anchor{cp/topics/contexts doc}@anchor{121}
+@anchor{cp/topics/contexts compilation-contexts}@anchor{121}@anchor{cp/topics/contexts doc}@anchor{122}
@subsection Compilation contexts
@geindex gccjit;;context (C++ class)
-@anchor{cp/topics/contexts gccjit context}@anchor{122}
+@anchor{cp/topics/contexts gccjit context}@anchor{123}
@deffn {C++ Class} gccjit::context
@end deffn
-The top-level of the C++ API is the @pxref{122,,gccjit;;context} type.
+The top-level of the C++ API is the @pxref{123,,gccjit;;context} type.
-A @pxref{122,,gccjit;;context} instance encapsulates the state of a
+A @pxref{123,,gccjit;;context} instance encapsulates the state of a
compilation.
You can set up options on it, and add types, functions and code.
-Invoking @pxref{fb,,gccjit;;context;;compile()} on it gives you a
+Invoking @pxref{fc,,gccjit;;context;;compile()} on it gives you a
@pxref{16,,gcc_jit_result *}.
It is a thin wrapper around the C API's @pxref{8,,gcc_jit_context *}.
@@ -11834,7 +11925,7 @@ It is a thin wrapper around the C API's @pxref{8,,gcc_jit_context *}.
@end menu
@node Lifetime-management<2>,Thread-safety<2>,,Compilation contexts<2>
-@anchor{cp/topics/contexts lifetime-management}@anchor{123}
+@anchor{cp/topics/contexts lifetime-management}@anchor{124}
@subsubsection Lifetime-management
@@ -11843,16 +11934,16 @@ have their lifetime bounded by the context they are created within, and
cleanup of such objects is done for you when the context is released.
@geindex gccjit;;context;;acquire (C++ function)
-@anchor{cp/topics/contexts gccjit context acquire}@anchor{f5}
+@anchor{cp/topics/contexts gccjit context acquire}@anchor{f6}
@deffn {C++ Function} gccjit::context gccjit::context::acquire ()
-This function acquires a new @pxref{122,,gccjit;;context} instance,
+This function acquires a new @pxref{123,,gccjit;;context} instance,
which is independent of any others that may be present within this
process.
@end deffn
@geindex gccjit;;context;;release (C++ function)
-@anchor{cp/topics/contexts gccjit context release}@anchor{f7}
+@anchor{cp/topics/contexts gccjit context release}@anchor{f8}
@deffn {C++ Function} void gccjit::context::release ()
This function releases all resources associated with the given context.
@@ -11871,7 +11962,7 @@ ctxt.release ();
@end deffn
@geindex gccjit;;context;;new_child_context (C++ function)
-@anchor{cp/topics/contexts gccjit context new_child_context}@anchor{124}
+@anchor{cp/topics/contexts gccjit context new_child_context}@anchor{125}
@deffn {C++ Function} gccjit::context gccjit::context::new_child_context ()
Given an existing JIT context, create a child context.
@@ -11903,16 +11994,16 @@ there will likely be a performance hit for such nesting.
@end deffn
@node Thread-safety<2>,Error-handling<3>,Lifetime-management<2>,Compilation contexts<2>
-@anchor{cp/topics/contexts thread-safety}@anchor{125}
+@anchor{cp/topics/contexts thread-safety}@anchor{126}
@subsubsection Thread-safety
-Instances of @pxref{122,,gccjit;;context} created via
-@pxref{f5,,gccjit;;context;;acquire()} are independent from each other:
+Instances of @pxref{123,,gccjit;;context} created via
+@pxref{f6,,gccjit;;context;;acquire()} are independent from each other:
only one thread may use a given context at once, but multiple threads
could each have their own contexts without needing locks.
-Contexts created via @pxref{124,,gccjit;;context;;new_child_context()} are
+Contexts created via @pxref{125,,gccjit;;context;;new_child_context()} are
related to their parent context. They can be partitioned by their
ultimate ancestor into independent "family trees". Only one thread
within a process may use a given "family tree" of such contexts at once,
@@ -11920,7 +12011,7 @@ and if you're using multiple threads you should provide your own locking
around entire such context partitions.
@node Error-handling<3>,Debugging<2>,Thread-safety<2>,Compilation contexts<2>
-@anchor{cp/topics/contexts error-handling}@anchor{126}
+@anchor{cp/topics/contexts error-handling}@anchor{127}
@subsubsection Error-handling
@@ -11933,10 +12024,10 @@ NULL. You don't have to check everywhere for NULL results, since the
API gracefully handles a NULL being passed in for any argument.
Errors are printed on stderr and can be queried using
-@pxref{127,,gccjit;;context;;get_first_error()}.
+@pxref{128,,gccjit;;context;;get_first_error()}.
@geindex gccjit;;context;;get_first_error (C++ function)
-@anchor{cp/topics/contexts gccjit context get_first_error__gccjit contextP}@anchor{127}
+@anchor{cp/topics/contexts gccjit context get_first_error__gccjit contextP}@anchor{128}
@deffn {C++ Function} const char* gccjit::context::get_first_error (gccjit::context* ctxt)
Returns the first error message that occurred on the context.
@@ -11948,18 +12039,18 @@ If no errors occurred, this will be NULL.
@end deffn
@node Debugging<2>,Options<4>,Error-handling<3>,Compilation contexts<2>
-@anchor{cp/topics/contexts debugging}@anchor{128}
+@anchor{cp/topics/contexts debugging}@anchor{129}
@subsubsection Debugging
@geindex gccjit;;context;;dump_to_file (C++ function)
-@anchor{cp/topics/contexts gccjit context dump_to_file__ssCR i}@anchor{129}
+@anchor{cp/topics/contexts gccjit context dump_to_file__ssCR i}@anchor{12a}
@deffn {C++ Function} void gccjit::context::dump_to_file (const std::string& path, int update_locations)
To help with debugging: dump a C-like representation to the given path,
describing what's been set up on the context.
-If "update_locations" is true, then also set up @pxref{12a,,gccjit;;location}
+If "update_locations" is true, then also set up @pxref{12b,,gccjit;;location}
information throughout the context, pointing at the dump file as if it
were a source file. This may be of use in conjunction with
@code{GCCJIT::BOOL_OPTION_DEBUGINFO} to allow stepping through the
@@ -11967,7 +12058,7 @@ code in a debugger.
@end deffn
@geindex gccjit;;context;;dump_reproducer_to_file (C++ function)
-@anchor{cp/topics/contexts gccjit context dump_reproducer_to_file__gcc_jit_contextP cCP}@anchor{12b}
+@anchor{cp/topics/contexts gccjit context dump_reproducer_to_file__gcc_jit_contextP cCP}@anchor{12c}
@deffn {C++ Function} void gccjit::context::dump_reproducer_to_file (gcc_jit_context* ctxt, const char* path)
This is a thin wrapper around the C API
@@ -11979,7 +12070,7 @@ for seeing what the C++ bindings are doing at the C level.
@end deffn
@node Options<4>,,Debugging<2>,Compilation contexts<2>
-@anchor{cp/topics/contexts options}@anchor{12c}
+@anchor{cp/topics/contexts options}@anchor{12d}
@subsubsection Options
@@ -11992,12 +12083,12 @@ for seeing what the C++ bindings are doing at the C level.
@end menu
@node String Options<2>,Boolean options<2>,,Options<4>
-@anchor{cp/topics/contexts string-options}@anchor{12d}
+@anchor{cp/topics/contexts string-options}@anchor{12e}
@subsubsection String Options
@geindex gccjit;;context;;set_str_option (C++ function)
-@anchor{cp/topics/contexts gccjit context set_str_option__enum cCP}@anchor{12e}
+@anchor{cp/topics/contexts gccjit context set_str_option__enum cCP}@anchor{12f}
@deffn {C++ Function} void gccjit::context::set_str_option (enum gcc_jit_str_option, const char* value)
Set a string option of the context.
@@ -12008,12 +12099,12 @@ meaning.
@end deffn
@node Boolean options<2>,Integer options<2>,String Options<2>,Options<4>
-@anchor{cp/topics/contexts boolean-options}@anchor{12f}
+@anchor{cp/topics/contexts boolean-options}@anchor{130}
@subsubsection Boolean options
@geindex gccjit;;context;;set_bool_option (C++ function)
-@anchor{cp/topics/contexts gccjit context set_bool_option__enum i}@anchor{fd}
+@anchor{cp/topics/contexts gccjit context set_bool_option__enum i}@anchor{fe}
@deffn {C++ Function} void gccjit::context::set_bool_option (enum gcc_jit_bool_option, int value)
Set a boolean option of the context.
@@ -12024,7 +12115,7 @@ meaning.
@end deffn
@geindex gccjit;;context;;set_bool_allow_unreachable_blocks (C++ function)
-@anchor{cp/topics/contexts gccjit context set_bool_allow_unreachable_blocks__i}@anchor{130}
+@anchor{cp/topics/contexts gccjit context set_bool_allow_unreachable_blocks__i}@anchor{131}
@deffn {C++ Function} void gccjit::context::set_bool_allow_unreachable_blocks (int bool_value)
By default, libgccjit will issue an error about unreachable blocks
@@ -12045,12 +12136,12 @@ its presence using
@end deffn
@node Integer options<2>,Additional command-line options<2>,Boolean options<2>,Options<4>
-@anchor{cp/topics/contexts integer-options}@anchor{131}
+@anchor{cp/topics/contexts integer-options}@anchor{132}
@subsubsection Integer options
@geindex gccjit;;context;;set_int_option (C++ function)
-@anchor{cp/topics/contexts gccjit context set_int_option__enum i}@anchor{fe}
+@anchor{cp/topics/contexts gccjit context set_int_option__enum i}@anchor{ff}
@deffn {C++ Function} void gccjit::context::set_int_option (enum gcc_jit_int_option, int value)
Set an integer option of the context.
@@ -12061,12 +12152,12 @@ meaning.
@end deffn
@node Additional command-line options<2>,,Integer options<2>,Options<4>
-@anchor{cp/topics/contexts additional-command-line-options}@anchor{132}
+@anchor{cp/topics/contexts additional-command-line-options}@anchor{133}
@subsubsection Additional command-line options
@geindex gccjit;;context;;add_command_line_option (C++ function)
-@anchor{cp/topics/contexts gccjit context add_command_line_option__cCP}@anchor{133}
+@anchor{cp/topics/contexts gccjit context add_command_line_option__cCP}@anchor{134}
@deffn {C++ Function} void gccjit::context::add_command_line_option (const char* optname)
Add an arbitrary gcc command-line option to the context for use
@@ -12103,18 +12194,18 @@ its presence using
@c <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
@node Objects<2>,Types<2>,Compilation contexts<2>,Topic Reference<2>
-@anchor{cp/topics/objects objects}@anchor{134}@anchor{cp/topics/objects doc}@anchor{135}
+@anchor{cp/topics/objects objects}@anchor{135}@anchor{cp/topics/objects doc}@anchor{136}
@subsection Objects
@geindex gccjit;;object (C++ class)
-@anchor{cp/topics/objects gccjit object}@anchor{136}
+@anchor{cp/topics/objects gccjit object}@anchor{137}
@deffn {C++ Class} gccjit::object
@end deffn
Almost every entity in the API (with the exception of
-@pxref{122,,gccjit;;context} and @pxref{16,,gcc_jit_result *}) is a
-"contextual" object, a @pxref{136,,gccjit;;object}.
+@pxref{123,,gccjit;;context} and @pxref{16,,gcc_jit_result *}) is a
+"contextual" object, a @pxref{137,,gccjit;;object}.
A JIT object:
@@ -12124,7 +12215,7 @@ A JIT object:
@itemize *
@item
-is associated with a @pxref{122,,gccjit;;context}.
+is associated with a @pxref{123,,gccjit;;context}.
@item
is automatically cleaned up for you when its context is released so
@@ -12151,17 +12242,17 @@ The C++ class hierarchy within the @code{gccjit} namespace looks like this:
@noindent
-The @pxref{136,,gccjit;;object} base class has the following operations:
+The @pxref{137,,gccjit;;object} base class has the following operations:
@geindex gccjit;;object;;get_context (C++ function)
-@anchor{cp/topics/objects gccjit object get_contextC}@anchor{137}
+@anchor{cp/topics/objects gccjit object get_contextC}@anchor{138}
@deffn {C++ Function} gccjit::context gccjit::object::get_context () const
Which context is the obj within?
@end deffn
@geindex gccjit;;object;;get_debug_string (C++ function)
-@anchor{cp/topics/objects gccjit object get_debug_stringC}@anchor{f8}
+@anchor{cp/topics/objects gccjit object get_debug_stringC}@anchor{f9}
@deffn {C++ Function} std::string gccjit::object::get_debug_string () const
Generate a human-readable description for the given object.
@@ -12201,16 +12292,16 @@ obj: 4.0 * (float)i
@c <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
@node Types<2>,Expressions<2>,Objects<2>,Topic Reference<2>
-@anchor{cp/topics/types doc}@anchor{138}@anchor{cp/topics/types types}@anchor{139}
+@anchor{cp/topics/types doc}@anchor{139}@anchor{cp/topics/types types}@anchor{13a}
@subsection Types
@geindex gccjit;;type (C++ class)
-@anchor{cp/topics/types gccjit type}@anchor{13a}
+@anchor{cp/topics/types gccjit type}@anchor{13b}
@deffn {C++ Class} gccjit::type
gccjit::type represents a type within the library. It is a subclass
-of @pxref{136,,gccjit;;object}.
+of @pxref{137,,gccjit;;object}.
@end deffn
Types can be created in several ways:
@@ -12220,7 +12311,7 @@ Types can be created in several ways:
@item
fundamental types can be accessed using
-@pxref{f6,,gccjit;;context;;get_type()}:
+@pxref{f7,,gccjit;;context;;get_type()}:
@example
gccjit::type int_type = ctxt.get_type (GCC_JIT_TYPE_INT);
@@ -12240,7 +12331,7 @@ See @pxref{b,,gcc_jit_context_get_type()} for the available types.
@item
derived types can be accessed by using functions such as
-@pxref{13b,,gccjit;;type;;get_pointer()} and @pxref{13c,,gccjit;;type;;get_const()}:
+@pxref{13c,,gccjit;;type;;get_pointer()} and @pxref{13d,,gccjit;;type;;get_const()}:
@example
gccjit::type const_int_star = int_type.get_const ().get_pointer ();
@@ -12261,12 +12352,12 @@ by creating structures (see below).
@end menu
@node Standard types<2>,Pointers const and volatile<2>,,Types<2>
-@anchor{cp/topics/types standard-types}@anchor{13d}
+@anchor{cp/topics/types standard-types}@anchor{13e}
@subsubsection Standard types
@geindex gccjit;;context;;get_type (C++ function)
-@anchor{cp/topics/types gccjit context get_type__enum}@anchor{f6}
+@anchor{cp/topics/types gccjit context get_type__enum}@anchor{f7}
@deffn {C++ Function} gccjit::type gccjit::context::get_type (enum gcc_jit_types)
Access a specific type. This is a thin wrapper around
@@ -12274,14 +12365,14 @@ Access a specific type. This is a thin wrapper around
@end deffn
@geindex gccjit;;context;;get_int_type (C++ function)
-@anchor{cp/topics/types gccjit context get_int_type__s i}@anchor{13e}
+@anchor{cp/topics/types gccjit context get_int_type__s i}@anchor{13f}
@deffn {C++ Function} gccjit::type gccjit::context::get_int_type (size_t num_bytes, int is_signed)
Access the integer type of the given size.
@end deffn
@geindex gccjit;;context;;get_int_type<T> (C++ function)
-@anchor{cp/topics/types gccjit context get_int_type T}@anchor{13f}
+@anchor{cp/topics/types gccjit context get_int_type T}@anchor{140}
@deffn {C++ Function} gccjit::type gccjit::context::get_int_type<T> ()
Access the given integer type. For example, you could map the
@@ -12295,12 +12386,12 @@ gccjit::type t = ctxt.get_int_type <unsigned short> ();
@end deffn
@node Pointers const and volatile<2>,Structures and unions<2>,Standard types<2>,Types<2>
-@anchor{cp/topics/types pointers-const-and-volatile}@anchor{140}
+@anchor{cp/topics/types pointers-const-and-volatile}@anchor{141}
@subsubsection Pointers, @cite{const}, and @cite{volatile}
@geindex gccjit;;type;;get_pointer (C++ function)
-@anchor{cp/topics/types gccjit type get_pointer}@anchor{13b}
+@anchor{cp/topics/types gccjit type get_pointer}@anchor{13c}
@deffn {C++ Function} gccjit::type gccjit::type::get_pointer ()
Given type "T", get type "T*".
@@ -12309,21 +12400,21 @@ Given type "T", get type "T*".
@c FIXME: get_const doesn't seem to exist
@geindex gccjit;;type;;get_const (C++ function)
-@anchor{cp/topics/types gccjit type get_const}@anchor{13c}
+@anchor{cp/topics/types gccjit type get_const}@anchor{13d}
@deffn {C++ Function} gccjit::type gccjit::type::get_const ()
Given type "T", get type "const T".
@end deffn
@geindex gccjit;;type;;get_volatile (C++ function)
-@anchor{cp/topics/types gccjit type get_volatile}@anchor{141}
+@anchor{cp/topics/types gccjit type get_volatile}@anchor{142}
@deffn {C++ Function} gccjit::type gccjit::type::get_volatile ()
Given type "T", get type "volatile T".
@end deffn
@geindex gccjit;;context;;new_array_type (C++ function)
-@anchor{cp/topics/types gccjit context new_array_type__gccjit type i gccjit location}@anchor{142}
+@anchor{cp/topics/types gccjit context new_array_type__gccjit type i gccjit location}@anchor{143}
@deffn {C++ Function} gccjit::type gccjit::context::new_array_type (gccjit::type element_type, int num_elements, gccjit::location loc)
Given type "T", get type "T[N]" (for a constant N).
@@ -12331,31 +12422,31 @@ Param "loc" is optional.
@end deffn
@node Structures and unions<2>,,Pointers const and volatile<2>,Types<2>
-@anchor{cp/topics/types structures-and-unions}@anchor{143}
+@anchor{cp/topics/types structures-and-unions}@anchor{144}
@subsubsection Structures and unions
@geindex gccjit;;struct_ (C++ class)
-@anchor{cp/topics/types gccjit struct_}@anchor{144}
+@anchor{cp/topics/types gccjit struct_}@anchor{145}
@deffn {C++ Class} gccjit::struct_
@end deffn
A compound type analagous to a C @cite{struct}.
-@pxref{144,,gccjit;;struct_} is a subclass of @pxref{13a,,gccjit;;type} (and thus
-of @pxref{136,,gccjit;;object} in turn).
+@pxref{145,,gccjit;;struct_} is a subclass of @pxref{13b,,gccjit;;type} (and thus
+of @pxref{137,,gccjit;;object} in turn).
@geindex gccjit;;field (C++ class)
-@anchor{cp/topics/types gccjit field}@anchor{145}
+@anchor{cp/topics/types gccjit field}@anchor{146}
@deffn {C++ Class} gccjit::field
@end deffn
-A field within a @pxref{144,,gccjit;;struct_}.
+A field within a @pxref{145,,gccjit;;struct_}.
-@pxref{145,,gccjit;;field} is a subclass of @pxref{136,,gccjit;;object}.
+@pxref{146,,gccjit;;field} is a subclass of @pxref{137,,gccjit;;object}.
-You can model C @cite{struct} types by creating @pxref{144,,gccjit;;struct_} and
-@pxref{145,,gccjit;;field} instances, in either order:
+You can model C @cite{struct} types by creating @pxref{145,,gccjit;;struct_} and
+@pxref{146,,gccjit;;field} instances, in either order:
@itemize *
@@ -12411,14 +12502,14 @@ node.set_fields (fields);
@c FIXME: the above API doesn't seem to exist yet
@geindex gccjit;;context;;new_field (C++ function)
-@anchor{cp/topics/types gccjit context new_field__gccjit type cCP gccjit location}@anchor{146}
+@anchor{cp/topics/types gccjit context new_field__gccjit type cCP gccjit location}@anchor{147}
@deffn {C++ Function} gccjit::field gccjit::context::new_field (gccjit::type type, const char* name, gccjit::location loc)
Construct a new field, with the given type and name.
@end deffn
@geindex gccjit;;context;;new_struct_type (C++ function)
-@anchor{cp/topics/types gccjit context new_struct_type__ssCR std vector field R gccjit location}@anchor{147}
+@anchor{cp/topics/types gccjit context new_struct_type__ssCR std vector field R gccjit location}@anchor{148}
@deffn {C++ Function} gccjit::struct_ gccjit::context::new_struct_type (const std::string& name, std::vector<field>& fields, gccjit::location loc)
@quotation
@@ -12428,7 +12519,7 @@ Construct a new struct type, with the given name and fields.
@end deffn
@geindex gccjit;;context;;new_opaque_struct (C++ function)
-@anchor{cp/topics/types gccjit context new_opaque_struct__ssCR gccjit location}@anchor{148}
+@anchor{cp/topics/types gccjit context new_opaque_struct__ssCR gccjit location}@anchor{149}
@deffn {C++ Function} gccjit::struct_ gccjit::context::new_opaque_struct (const std::string& name, gccjit::location loc)
Construct a new struct type, with the given name, but without
@@ -12455,7 +12546,7 @@ size of the struct is not known), or later specified using
@c <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
@node Expressions<2>,Creating and using functions<2>,Types<2>,Topic Reference<2>
-@anchor{cp/topics/expressions expressions}@anchor{149}@anchor{cp/topics/expressions doc}@anchor{14a}
+@anchor{cp/topics/expressions expressions}@anchor{14a}@anchor{cp/topics/expressions doc}@anchor{14b}
@subsection Expressions
@@ -12481,17 +12572,17 @@ Lvalues
@node Rvalues<2>,Lvalues<2>,,Expressions<2>
-@anchor{cp/topics/expressions rvalues}@anchor{14b}
+@anchor{cp/topics/expressions rvalues}@anchor{14c}
@subsubsection Rvalues
@geindex gccjit;;rvalue (C++ class)
-@anchor{cp/topics/expressions gccjit rvalue}@anchor{14c}
+@anchor{cp/topics/expressions gccjit rvalue}@anchor{14d}
@deffn {C++ Class} gccjit::rvalue
@end deffn
-A @pxref{14c,,gccjit;;rvalue} is an expression that can be computed. It is a
-subclass of @pxref{136,,gccjit;;object}, and is a thin wrapper around
+A @pxref{14d,,gccjit;;rvalue} is an expression that can be computed. It is a
+subclass of @pxref{137,,gccjit;;object}, and is a thin wrapper around
@pxref{13,,gcc_jit_rvalue *} from the C API.
It can be simple, e.g.:
@@ -12537,7 +12628,7 @@ Every rvalue has an associated type, and the API will check to ensure
that types match up correctly (otherwise the context will emit an error).
@geindex gccjit;;rvalue;;get_type (C++ function)
-@anchor{cp/topics/expressions gccjit rvalue get_type}@anchor{14d}
+@anchor{cp/topics/expressions gccjit rvalue get_type}@anchor{14e}
@deffn {C++ Function} gccjit::type gccjit::rvalue::get_type ()
Get the type of this rvalue.
@@ -12554,12 +12645,12 @@ Get the type of this rvalue.
@end menu
@node Simple expressions<2>,Unary Operations<2>,,Rvalues<2>
-@anchor{cp/topics/expressions simple-expressions}@anchor{14e}
+@anchor{cp/topics/expressions simple-expressions}@anchor{14f}
@subsubsection Simple expressions
@geindex gccjit;;context;;new_rvalue (C++ function)
-@anchor{cp/topics/expressions gccjit context new_rvalue__gccjit type iC}@anchor{10a}
+@anchor{cp/topics/expressions gccjit context new_rvalue__gccjit type iC}@anchor{10b}
@deffn {C++ Function} gccjit::rvalue gccjit::context::new_rvalue (gccjit::type numeric_type, int value) const
Given a numeric type (integer or floating point), build an rvalue for
@@ -12567,7 +12658,7 @@ the given constant @code{int} value.
@end deffn
@geindex gccjit;;context;;new_rvalue (C++ function)
-@anchor{cp/topics/expressions gccjit context new_rvalue__gccjit type lC}@anchor{14f}
+@anchor{cp/topics/expressions gccjit context new_rvalue__gccjit type lC}@anchor{150}
@deffn {C++ Function} gccjit::rvalue gccjit::context::new_rvalue (gccjit::type numeric_type, long value) const
Given a numeric type (integer or floating point), build an rvalue for
@@ -12575,7 +12666,7 @@ the given constant @code{long} value.
@end deffn
@geindex gccjit;;context;;zero (C++ function)
-@anchor{cp/topics/expressions gccjit context zero__gccjit typeC}@anchor{106}
+@anchor{cp/topics/expressions gccjit context zero__gccjit typeC}@anchor{107}
@deffn {C++ Function} gccjit::rvalue gccjit::context::zero (gccjit::type numeric_type) const
Given a numeric type (integer or floating point), get the rvalue for
@@ -12589,7 +12680,7 @@ ctxt.new_rvalue (numeric_type, 0)
@end deffn
@geindex gccjit;;context;;one (C++ function)
-@anchor{cp/topics/expressions gccjit context one__gccjit typeC}@anchor{150}
+@anchor{cp/topics/expressions gccjit context one__gccjit typeC}@anchor{151}
@deffn {C++ Function} gccjit::rvalue gccjit::context::one (gccjit::type numeric_type) const
Given a numeric type (integer or floating point), get the rvalue for
@@ -12603,7 +12694,7 @@ ctxt.new_rvalue (numeric_type, 1)
@end deffn
@geindex gccjit;;context;;new_rvalue (C++ function)
-@anchor{cp/topics/expressions gccjit context new_rvalue__gccjit type doubleC}@anchor{151}
+@anchor{cp/topics/expressions gccjit context new_rvalue__gccjit type doubleC}@anchor{152}
@deffn {C++ Function} gccjit::rvalue gccjit::context::new_rvalue (gccjit::type numeric_type, double value) const
Given a numeric type (integer or floating point), build an rvalue for
@@ -12611,14 +12702,14 @@ the given constant @code{double} value.
@end deffn
@geindex gccjit;;context;;new_rvalue (C++ function)
-@anchor{cp/topics/expressions gccjit context new_rvalue__gccjit type voidPC}@anchor{152}
+@anchor{cp/topics/expressions gccjit context new_rvalue__gccjit type voidPC}@anchor{153}
@deffn {C++ Function} gccjit::rvalue gccjit::context::new_rvalue (gccjit::type pointer_type, void* value) const
Given a pointer type, build an rvalue for the given address.
@end deffn
@geindex gccjit;;context;;new_rvalue (C++ function)
-@anchor{cp/topics/expressions gccjit context new_rvalue__ssCRC}@anchor{153}
+@anchor{cp/topics/expressions gccjit context new_rvalue__ssCRC}@anchor{154}
@deffn {C++ Function} gccjit::rvalue gccjit::context::new_rvalue (const std::string& value) const
Generate an rvalue of type @code{GCC_JIT_TYPE_CONST_CHAR_PTR} for
@@ -12626,12 +12717,12 @@ the given string. This is akin to a string literal.
@end deffn
@node Unary Operations<2>,Binary Operations<2>,Simple expressions<2>,Rvalues<2>
-@anchor{cp/topics/expressions unary-operations}@anchor{154}
+@anchor{cp/topics/expressions unary-operations}@anchor{155}
@subsubsection Unary Operations
@geindex gccjit;;context;;new_unary_op (C++ function)
-@anchor{cp/topics/expressions gccjit context new_unary_op__enum gccjit type gccjit rvalue gccjit location}@anchor{155}
+@anchor{cp/topics/expressions gccjit context new_unary_op__enum gccjit type gccjit rvalue gccjit location}@anchor{156}
@deffn {C++ Function} gccjit::rvalue gccjit::context::new_unary_op (enum gcc_jit_unary_op, gccjit::type result_type, gccjit::rvalue rvalue, gccjit::location loc)
Build a unary operation out of an input rvalue.
@@ -12639,7 +12730,7 @@ Build a unary operation out of an input rvalue.
Parameter @code{loc} is optional.
This is a thin wrapper around the C API's
-@pxref{91,,gcc_jit_context_new_unary_op()} and the available unary
+@pxref{92,,gcc_jit_context_new_unary_op()} and the available unary
operations are documented there.
@end deffn
@@ -12647,7 +12738,7 @@ There are shorter ways to spell the various specific kinds of unary
operation:
@geindex gccjit;;context;;new_minus (C++ function)
-@anchor{cp/topics/expressions gccjit context new_minus__gccjit type gccjit rvalue gccjit location}@anchor{156}
+@anchor{cp/topics/expressions gccjit context new_minus__gccjit type gccjit rvalue gccjit location}@anchor{157}
@deffn {C++ Function} gccjit::rvalue gccjit::context::new_minus (gccjit::type result_type, gccjit::rvalue a, gccjit::location loc)
Negate an arithmetic value; for example:
@@ -12668,7 +12759,7 @@ builds the equivalent of this C expression:
@end deffn
@geindex new_bitwise_negate (C++ function)
-@anchor{cp/topics/expressions new_bitwise_negate__gccjit type gccjit rvalue gccjit location}@anchor{157}
+@anchor{cp/topics/expressions new_bitwise_negate__gccjit type gccjit rvalue gccjit location}@anchor{158}
@deffn {C++ Function} gccjit::rvalue new_bitwise_negate (gccjit::type result_type, gccjit::rvalue a, gccjit::location loc)
Bitwise negation of an integer value (one's complement); for example:
@@ -12689,7 +12780,7 @@ builds the equivalent of this C expression:
@end deffn
@geindex new_logical_negate (C++ function)
-@anchor{cp/topics/expressions new_logical_negate__gccjit type gccjit rvalue gccjit location}@anchor{158}
+@anchor{cp/topics/expressions new_logical_negate__gccjit type gccjit rvalue gccjit location}@anchor{159}
@deffn {C++ Function} gccjit::rvalue new_logical_negate (gccjit::type result_type, gccjit::rvalue a, gccjit::location loc)
Logical negation of an arithmetic or pointer value; for example:
@@ -12712,7 +12803,7 @@ builds the equivalent of this C expression:
The most concise way to spell them is with overloaded operators:
@geindex operator- (C++ function)
-@anchor{cp/topics/expressions sub-operator__gccjit rvalue}@anchor{159}
+@anchor{cp/topics/expressions sub-operator__gccjit rvalue}@anchor{15a}
@deffn {C++ Function} gccjit::rvalue operator- (gccjit::rvalue a)
@example
@@ -12723,7 +12814,7 @@ gccjit::rvalue negpi = -pi;
@end deffn
@geindex operator~ (C++ function)
-@anchor{cp/topics/expressions inv-operator__gccjit rvalue}@anchor{15a}
+@anchor{cp/topics/expressions inv-operator__gccjit rvalue}@anchor{15b}
@deffn {C++ Function} gccjit::rvalue operator~ (gccjit::rvalue a)
@example
@@ -12734,7 +12825,7 @@ gccjit::rvalue mask = ~a;
@end deffn
@geindex operator! (C++ function)
-@anchor{cp/topics/expressions not-operator__gccjit rvalue}@anchor{15b}
+@anchor{cp/topics/expressions not-operator__gccjit rvalue}@anchor{15c}
@deffn {C++ Function} gccjit::rvalue operator! (gccjit::rvalue a)
@example
@@ -12745,12 +12836,12 @@ gccjit::rvalue guard = !cond;
@end deffn
@node Binary Operations<2>,Comparisons<2>,Unary Operations<2>,Rvalues<2>
-@anchor{cp/topics/expressions binary-operations}@anchor{15c}
+@anchor{cp/topics/expressions binary-operations}@anchor{15d}
@subsubsection Binary Operations
@geindex gccjit;;context;;new_binary_op (C++ function)
-@anchor{cp/topics/expressions gccjit context new_binary_op__enum gccjit type gccjit rvalue gccjit rvalue gccjit location}@anchor{fa}
+@anchor{cp/topics/expressions gccjit context new_binary_op__enum gccjit type gccjit rvalue gccjit rvalue gccjit location}@anchor{fb}
@deffn {C++ Function} gccjit::rvalue gccjit::context::new_binary_op (enum gcc_jit_binary_op, gccjit::type result_type, gccjit::rvalue a, gccjit::rvalue b, gccjit::location loc)
Build a binary operation out of two constituent rvalues.
@@ -12766,59 +12857,59 @@ There are shorter ways to spell the various specific kinds of binary
operation:
@geindex gccjit;;context;;new_plus (C++ function)
-@anchor{cp/topics/expressions gccjit context new_plus__gccjit type gccjit rvalue gccjit rvalue gccjit location}@anchor{15d}
+@anchor{cp/topics/expressions gccjit context new_plus__gccjit type gccjit rvalue gccjit rvalue gccjit location}@anchor{15e}
@deffn {C++ Function} gccjit::rvalue gccjit::context::new_plus (gccjit::type result_type, gccjit::rvalue a, gccjit::rvalue b, gccjit::location loc)
@end deffn
@geindex gccjit;;context;;new_minus (C++ function)
-@anchor{cp/topics/expressions gccjit context new_minus__gccjit type gccjit rvalue gccjit rvalue gccjit location}@anchor{15e}
+@anchor{cp/topics/expressions gccjit context new_minus__gccjit type gccjit rvalue gccjit rvalue gccjit location}@anchor{15f}
@deffn {C++ Function} gccjit::rvalue gccjit::context::new_minus (gccjit::type result_type, gccjit::rvalue a, gccjit::rvalue b, gccjit::location loc)
@end deffn
@geindex gccjit;;context;;new_mult (C++ function)
-@anchor{cp/topics/expressions gccjit context new_mult__gccjit type gccjit rvalue gccjit rvalue gccjit location}@anchor{15f}
+@anchor{cp/topics/expressions gccjit context new_mult__gccjit type gccjit rvalue gccjit rvalue gccjit location}@anchor{160}
@deffn {C++ Function} gccjit::rvalue gccjit::context::new_mult (gccjit::type result_type, gccjit::rvalue a, gccjit::rvalue b, gccjit::location loc)
@end deffn
@geindex gccjit;;context;;new_divide (C++ function)
-@anchor{cp/topics/expressions gccjit context new_divide__gccjit type gccjit rvalue gccjit rvalue gccjit location}@anchor{160}
+@anchor{cp/topics/expressions gccjit context new_divide__gccjit type gccjit rvalue gccjit rvalue gccjit location}@anchor{161}
@deffn {C++ Function} gccjit::rvalue gccjit::context::new_divide (gccjit::type result_type, gccjit::rvalue a, gccjit::rvalue b, gccjit::location loc)
@end deffn
@geindex gccjit;;context;;new_modulo (C++ function)
-@anchor{cp/topics/expressions gccjit context new_modulo__gccjit type gccjit rvalue gccjit rvalue gccjit location}@anchor{161}
+@anchor{cp/topics/expressions gccjit context new_modulo__gccjit type gccjit rvalue gccjit rvalue gccjit location}@anchor{162}
@deffn {C++ Function} gccjit::rvalue gccjit::context::new_modulo (gccjit::type result_type, gccjit::rvalue a, gccjit::rvalue b, gccjit::location loc)
@end deffn
@geindex gccjit;;context;;new_bitwise_and (C++ function)
-@anchor{cp/topics/expressions gccjit context new_bitwise_and__gccjit type gccjit rvalue gccjit rvalue gccjit location}@anchor{162}
+@anchor{cp/topics/expressions gccjit context new_bitwise_and__gccjit type gccjit rvalue gccjit rvalue gccjit location}@anchor{163}
@deffn {C++ Function} gccjit::rvalue gccjit::context::new_bitwise_and (gccjit::type result_type, gccjit::rvalue a, gccjit::rvalue b, gccjit::location loc)
@end deffn
@geindex gccjit;;context;;new_bitwise_xor (C++ function)
-@anchor{cp/topics/expressions gccjit context new_bitwise_xor__gccjit type gccjit rvalue gccjit rvalue gccjit location}@anchor{163}
+@anchor{cp/topics/expressions gccjit context new_bitwise_xor__gccjit type gccjit rvalue gccjit rvalue gccjit location}@anchor{164}
@deffn {C++ Function} gccjit::rvalue gccjit::context::new_bitwise_xor (gccjit::type result_type, gccjit::rvalue a, gccjit::rvalue b, gccjit::location loc)
@end deffn
@geindex gccjit;;context;;new_bitwise_or (C++ function)
-@anchor{cp/topics/expressions gccjit context new_bitwise_or__gccjit type gccjit rvalue gccjit rvalue gccjit location}@anchor{164}
+@anchor{cp/topics/expressions gccjit context new_bitwise_or__gccjit type gccjit rvalue gccjit rvalue gccjit location}@anchor{165}
@deffn {C++ Function} gccjit::rvalue gccjit::context::new_bitwise_or (gccjit::type result_type, gccjit::rvalue a, gccjit::rvalue b, gccjit::location loc)
@end deffn
@geindex gccjit;;context;;new_logical_and (C++ function)
-@anchor{cp/topics/expressions gccjit context new_logical_and__gccjit type gccjit rvalue gccjit rvalue gccjit location}@anchor{165}
+@anchor{cp/topics/expressions gccjit context new_logical_and__gccjit type gccjit rvalue gccjit rvalue gccjit location}@anchor{166}
@deffn {C++ Function} gccjit::rvalue gccjit::context::new_logical_and (gccjit::type result_type, gccjit::rvalue a, gccjit::rvalue b, gccjit::location loc)
@end deffn
@geindex gccjit;;context;;new_logical_or (C++ function)
-@anchor{cp/topics/expressions gccjit context new_logical_or__gccjit type gccjit rvalue gccjit rvalue gccjit location}@anchor{166}
+@anchor{cp/topics/expressions gccjit context new_logical_or__gccjit type gccjit rvalue gccjit rvalue gccjit location}@anchor{167}
@deffn {C++ Function} gccjit::rvalue gccjit::context::new_logical_or (gccjit::type result_type, gccjit::rvalue a, gccjit::rvalue b, gccjit::location loc)
@end deffn
The most concise way to spell them is with overloaded operators:
@geindex operator+ (C++ function)
-@anchor{cp/topics/expressions add-operator__gccjit rvalue gccjit rvalue}@anchor{167}
+@anchor{cp/topics/expressions add-operator__gccjit rvalue gccjit rvalue}@anchor{168}
@deffn {C++ Function} gccjit::rvalue operator+ (gccjit::rvalue a, gccjit::rvalue b)
@example
@@ -12829,7 +12920,7 @@ gccjit::rvalue sum = a + b;
@end deffn
@geindex operator- (C++ function)
-@anchor{cp/topics/expressions sub-operator__gccjit rvalue gccjit rvalue}@anchor{168}
+@anchor{cp/topics/expressions sub-operator__gccjit rvalue gccjit rvalue}@anchor{169}
@deffn {C++ Function} gccjit::rvalue operator- (gccjit::rvalue a, gccjit::rvalue b)
@example
@@ -12840,7 +12931,7 @@ gccjit::rvalue diff = a - b;
@end deffn
@geindex operator* (C++ function)
-@anchor{cp/topics/expressions mul-operator__gccjit rvalue gccjit rvalue}@anchor{169}
+@anchor{cp/topics/expressions mul-operator__gccjit rvalue gccjit rvalue}@anchor{16a}
@deffn {C++ Function} gccjit::rvalue operator* (gccjit::rvalue a, gccjit::rvalue b)
@example
@@ -12851,7 +12942,7 @@ gccjit::rvalue prod = a * b;
@end deffn
@geindex operator/ (C++ function)
-@anchor{cp/topics/expressions div-operator__gccjit rvalue gccjit rvalue}@anchor{16a}
+@anchor{cp/topics/expressions div-operator__gccjit rvalue gccjit rvalue}@anchor{16b}
@deffn {C++ Function} gccjit::rvalue operator/ (gccjit::rvalue a, gccjit::rvalue b)
@example
@@ -12862,7 +12953,7 @@ gccjit::rvalue result = a / b;
@end deffn
@geindex operator% (C++ function)
-@anchor{cp/topics/expressions mod-operator__gccjit rvalue gccjit rvalue}@anchor{16b}
+@anchor{cp/topics/expressions mod-operator__gccjit rvalue gccjit rvalue}@anchor{16c}
@deffn {C++ Function} gccjit::rvalue operator% (gccjit::rvalue a, gccjit::rvalue b)
@example
@@ -12873,7 +12964,7 @@ gccjit::rvalue mod = a % b;
@end deffn
@geindex operator& (C++ function)
-@anchor{cp/topics/expressions and-operator__gccjit rvalue gccjit rvalue}@anchor{16c}
+@anchor{cp/topics/expressions and-operator__gccjit rvalue gccjit rvalue}@anchor{16d}
@deffn {C++ Function} gccjit::rvalue operator& (gccjit::rvalue a, gccjit::rvalue b)
@example
@@ -12884,7 +12975,7 @@ gccjit::rvalue x = a & b;
@end deffn
@geindex operator^ (C++ function)
-@anchor{cp/topics/expressions xor-operator__gccjit rvalue gccjit rvalue}@anchor{16d}
+@anchor{cp/topics/expressions xor-operator__gccjit rvalue gccjit rvalue}@anchor{16e}
@deffn {C++ Function} gccjit::rvalue operator^ (gccjit::rvalue a, gccjit::rvalue b)
@example
@@ -12895,7 +12986,7 @@ gccjit::rvalue x = a ^ b;
@end deffn
@geindex operator| (C++ function)
-@anchor{cp/topics/expressions or-operator__gccjit rvalue gccjit rvalue}@anchor{16e}
+@anchor{cp/topics/expressions or-operator__gccjit rvalue gccjit rvalue}@anchor{16f}
@deffn {C++ Function} gccjit::rvalue operator| (gccjit::rvalue a, gccjit::rvalue b)
@example
@@ -12906,7 +12997,7 @@ gccjit::rvalue x = a | b;
@end deffn
@geindex operator&& (C++ function)
-@anchor{cp/topics/expressions sand-operator__gccjit rvalue gccjit rvalue}@anchor{16f}
+@anchor{cp/topics/expressions sand-operator__gccjit rvalue gccjit rvalue}@anchor{170}
@deffn {C++ Function} gccjit::rvalue operator&& (gccjit::rvalue a, gccjit::rvalue b)
@example
@@ -12917,7 +13008,7 @@ gccjit::rvalue cond = a && b;
@end deffn
@geindex operator|| (C++ function)
-@anchor{cp/topics/expressions sor-operator__gccjit rvalue gccjit rvalue}@anchor{170}
+@anchor{cp/topics/expressions sor-operator__gccjit rvalue gccjit rvalue}@anchor{171}
@deffn {C++ Function} gccjit::rvalue operator|| (gccjit::rvalue a, gccjit::rvalue b)
@example
@@ -12940,12 +13031,12 @@ gccjit::rvalue discriminant = (b * b) - (four * a * c);
@end quotation
@node Comparisons<2>,Function calls<2>,Binary Operations<2>,Rvalues<2>
-@anchor{cp/topics/expressions comparisons}@anchor{171}
+@anchor{cp/topics/expressions comparisons}@anchor{172}
@subsubsection Comparisons
@geindex gccjit;;context;;new_comparison (C++ function)
-@anchor{cp/topics/expressions gccjit context new_comparison__enum gccjit rvalue gccjit rvalue gccjit location}@anchor{107}
+@anchor{cp/topics/expressions gccjit context new_comparison__enum gccjit rvalue gccjit rvalue gccjit location}@anchor{108}
@deffn {C++ Function} gccjit::rvalue gccjit::context::new_comparison (enum gcc_jit_comparison, gccjit::rvalue a, gccjit::rvalue b, gccjit::location loc)
Build a boolean rvalue out of the comparison of two other rvalues.
@@ -12961,39 +13052,39 @@ There are shorter ways to spell the various specific kinds of binary
operation:
@geindex gccjit;;context;;new_eq (C++ function)
-@anchor{cp/topics/expressions gccjit context new_eq__gccjit rvalue gccjit rvalue gccjit location}@anchor{172}
+@anchor{cp/topics/expressions gccjit context new_eq__gccjit rvalue gccjit rvalue gccjit location}@anchor{173}
@deffn {C++ Function} gccjit::rvalue gccjit::context::new_eq (gccjit::rvalue a, gccjit::rvalue b, gccjit::location loc)
@end deffn
@geindex gccjit;;context;;new_ne (C++ function)
-@anchor{cp/topics/expressions gccjit context new_ne__gccjit rvalue gccjit rvalue gccjit location}@anchor{173}
+@anchor{cp/topics/expressions gccjit context new_ne__gccjit rvalue gccjit rvalue gccjit location}@anchor{174}
@deffn {C++ Function} gccjit::rvalue gccjit::context::new_ne (gccjit::rvalue a, gccjit::rvalue b, gccjit::location loc)
@end deffn
@geindex gccjit;;context;;new_lt (C++ function)
-@anchor{cp/topics/expressions gccjit context new_lt__gccjit rvalue gccjit rvalue gccjit location}@anchor{174}
+@anchor{cp/topics/expressions gccjit context new_lt__gccjit rvalue gccjit rvalue gccjit location}@anchor{175}
@deffn {C++ Function} gccjit::rvalue gccjit::context::new_lt (gccjit::rvalue a, gccjit::rvalue b, gccjit::location loc)
@end deffn
@geindex gccjit;;context;;new_le (C++ function)
-@anchor{cp/topics/expressions gccjit context new_le__gccjit rvalue gccjit rvalue gccjit location}@anchor{175}
+@anchor{cp/topics/expressions gccjit context new_le__gccjit rvalue gccjit rvalue gccjit location}@anchor{176}
@deffn {C++ Function} gccjit::rvalue gccjit::context::new_le (gccjit::rvalue a, gccjit::rvalue b, gccjit::location loc)
@end deffn
@geindex gccjit;;context;;new_gt (C++ function)
-@anchor{cp/topics/expressions gccjit context new_gt__gccjit rvalue gccjit rvalue gccjit location}@anchor{176}
+@anchor{cp/topics/expressions gccjit context new_gt__gccjit rvalue gccjit rvalue gccjit location}@anchor{177}
@deffn {C++ Function} gccjit::rvalue gccjit::context::new_gt (gccjit::rvalue a, gccjit::rvalue b, gccjit::location loc)
@end deffn
@geindex gccjit;;context;;new_ge (C++ function)
-@anchor{cp/topics/expressions gccjit context new_ge__gccjit rvalue gccjit rvalue gccjit location}@anchor{177}
+@anchor{cp/topics/expressions gccjit context new_ge__gccjit rvalue gccjit rvalue gccjit location}@anchor{178}
@deffn {C++ Function} gccjit::rvalue gccjit::context::new_ge (gccjit::rvalue a, gccjit::rvalue b, gccjit::location loc)
@end deffn
The most concise way to spell them is with overloaded operators:
@geindex operator== (C++ function)
-@anchor{cp/topics/expressions eq-operator__gccjit rvalue gccjit rvalue}@anchor{178}
+@anchor{cp/topics/expressions eq-operator__gccjit rvalue gccjit rvalue}@anchor{179}
@deffn {C++ Function} gccjit::rvalue operator== (gccjit::rvalue a, gccjit::rvalue b)
@example
@@ -13004,7 +13095,7 @@ gccjit::rvalue cond = (a == ctxt.zero (t_int));
@end deffn
@geindex operator!= (C++ function)
-@anchor{cp/topics/expressions neq-operator__gccjit rvalue gccjit rvalue}@anchor{179}
+@anchor{cp/topics/expressions neq-operator__gccjit rvalue gccjit rvalue}@anchor{17a}
@deffn {C++ Function} gccjit::rvalue operator!= (gccjit::rvalue a, gccjit::rvalue b)
@example
@@ -13015,7 +13106,7 @@ gccjit::rvalue cond = (i != j);
@end deffn
@geindex operator< (C++ function)
-@anchor{cp/topics/expressions lt-operator__gccjit rvalue gccjit rvalue}@anchor{17a}
+@anchor{cp/topics/expressions lt-operator__gccjit rvalue gccjit rvalue}@anchor{17b}
@deffn {C++ Function} gccjit::rvalue operator< (gccjit::rvalue a, gccjit::rvalue b)
@example
@@ -13026,7 +13117,7 @@ gccjit::rvalue cond = i < n;
@end deffn
@geindex operator<= (C++ function)
-@anchor{cp/topics/expressions lte-operator__gccjit rvalue gccjit rvalue}@anchor{17b}
+@anchor{cp/topics/expressions lte-operator__gccjit rvalue gccjit rvalue}@anchor{17c}
@deffn {C++ Function} gccjit::rvalue operator<= (gccjit::rvalue a, gccjit::rvalue b)
@example
@@ -13037,7 +13128,7 @@ gccjit::rvalue cond = i <= n;
@end deffn
@geindex operator> (C++ function)
-@anchor{cp/topics/expressions gt-operator__gccjit rvalue gccjit rvalue}@anchor{17c}
+@anchor{cp/topics/expressions gt-operator__gccjit rvalue gccjit rvalue}@anchor{17d}
@deffn {C++ Function} gccjit::rvalue operator> (gccjit::rvalue a, gccjit::rvalue b)
@example
@@ -13048,7 +13139,7 @@ gccjit::rvalue cond = (ch > limit);
@end deffn
@geindex operator>= (C++ function)
-@anchor{cp/topics/expressions gte-operator__gccjit rvalue gccjit rvalue}@anchor{17d}
+@anchor{cp/topics/expressions gte-operator__gccjit rvalue gccjit rvalue}@anchor{17e}
@deffn {C++ Function} gccjit::rvalue operator>= (gccjit::rvalue a, gccjit::rvalue b)
@example
@@ -13061,12 +13152,12 @@ gccjit::rvalue cond = (score >= ctxt.new_rvalue (t_int, 100));
@c TODO: beyond this point
@node Function calls<2>,Type-coercion<2>,Comparisons<2>,Rvalues<2>
-@anchor{cp/topics/expressions function-calls}@anchor{17e}
+@anchor{cp/topics/expressions function-calls}@anchor{17f}
@subsubsection Function calls
@geindex gcc_jit_context_new_call (C++ function)
-@anchor{cp/topics/expressions gcc_jit_context_new_call__gcc_jit_contextP gcc_jit_locationP gcc_jit_functionP i gcc_jit_rvaluePP}@anchor{17f}
+@anchor{cp/topics/expressions gcc_jit_context_new_call__gcc_jit_contextP gcc_jit_locationP gcc_jit_functionP i gcc_jit_rvaluePP}@anchor{180}
@deffn {C++ Function} gcc_jit_rvalue* gcc_jit_context_new_call (gcc_jit_context* ctxt, gcc_jit_location* loc, gcc_jit_function* func, int numargs, gcc_jit_rvalue** args)
Given a function and the given table of argument rvalues, construct a
@@ -13075,14 +13166,14 @@ call to the function, with the result as an rvalue.
@cartouche
@quotation Note
@code{gccjit::context::new_call()} merely builds a
-@pxref{14c,,gccjit;;rvalue} i.e. an expression that can be evaluated,
+@pxref{14d,,gccjit;;rvalue} i.e. an expression that can be evaluated,
perhaps as part of a more complicated expression.
The call @emph{won't} happen unless you add a statement to a function
that evaluates the expression.
For example, if you want to call a function and discard the result
(or to call a function with @code{void} return type), use
-@pxref{180,,gccjit;;block;;add_eval()}:
+@pxref{181,,gccjit;;block;;add_eval()}:
@example
/* Add "(void)printf (arg0, arg1);". */
@@ -13095,12 +13186,12 @@ block.add_eval (ctxt.new_call (printf_func, arg0, arg1));
@end deffn
@node Type-coercion<2>,,Function calls<2>,Rvalues<2>
-@anchor{cp/topics/expressions type-coercion}@anchor{181}
+@anchor{cp/topics/expressions type-coercion}@anchor{182}
@subsubsection Type-coercion
@geindex gccjit;;context;;new_cast (C++ function)
-@anchor{cp/topics/expressions gccjit context new_cast__gccjit rvalue gccjit type gccjit location}@anchor{182}
+@anchor{cp/topics/expressions gccjit context new_cast__gccjit rvalue gccjit type gccjit location}@anchor{183}
@deffn {C++ Function} gccjit::rvalue gccjit::context::new_cast (gccjit::rvalue rvalue, gccjit::type type, gccjit::location loc)
Given an rvalue of T, construct another rvalue of another type.
@@ -13125,24 +13216,24 @@ P* <-> Q*, for pointer types P and Q
@end deffn
@node Lvalues<2>,Working with pointers structs and unions<2>,Rvalues<2>,Expressions<2>
-@anchor{cp/topics/expressions lvalues}@anchor{183}
+@anchor{cp/topics/expressions lvalues}@anchor{184}
@subsubsection Lvalues
@geindex gccjit;;lvalue (C++ class)
-@anchor{cp/topics/expressions gccjit lvalue}@anchor{184}
+@anchor{cp/topics/expressions gccjit lvalue}@anchor{185}
@deffn {C++ Class} gccjit::lvalue
@end deffn
An lvalue is something that can of the @emph{left}-hand side of an assignment:
a storage area (such as a variable). It is a subclass of
-@pxref{14c,,gccjit;;rvalue}, where the rvalue is computed by reading from the
+@pxref{14d,,gccjit;;rvalue}, where the rvalue is computed by reading from the
storage area.
It iss a thin wrapper around @pxref{24,,gcc_jit_lvalue *} from the C API.
@geindex gccjit;;lvalue;;get_address (C++ function)
-@anchor{cp/topics/expressions gccjit lvalue get_address__gccjit location}@anchor{185}
+@anchor{cp/topics/expressions gccjit lvalue get_address__gccjit location}@anchor{186}
@deffn {C++ Function} gccjit::rvalue gccjit::lvalue::get_address (gccjit::location loc)
Take the address of an lvalue; analogous to:
@@ -13164,27 +13255,27 @@ Parameter "loc" is optional.
@end menu
@node Global variables<2>,,,Lvalues<2>
-@anchor{cp/topics/expressions global-variables}@anchor{186}
+@anchor{cp/topics/expressions global-variables}@anchor{187}
@subsubsection Global variables
@geindex gccjit;;context;;new_global (C++ function)
-@anchor{cp/topics/expressions gccjit context new_global__enum gccjit type cCP gccjit location}@anchor{187}
+@anchor{cp/topics/expressions gccjit context new_global__enum gccjit type cCP gccjit location}@anchor{188}
@deffn {C++ Function} gccjit::lvalue gccjit::context::new_global (enum gcc_jit_global_kind, gccjit::type type, const char* name, gccjit::location loc)
Add a new global variable of the given type and name to the context.
-This is a thin wrapper around @pxref{b2,,gcc_jit_context_new_global()} from
+This is a thin wrapper around @pxref{b3,,gcc_jit_context_new_global()} from
the C API; the "kind" parameter has the same meaning as there.
@end deffn
@node Working with pointers structs and unions<2>,,Lvalues<2>,Expressions<2>
-@anchor{cp/topics/expressions working-with-pointers-structs-and-unions}@anchor{188}
+@anchor{cp/topics/expressions working-with-pointers-structs-and-unions}@anchor{189}
@subsubsection Working with pointers, structs and unions
@geindex gccjit;;rvalue;;dereference (C++ function)
-@anchor{cp/topics/expressions gccjit rvalue dereference__gccjit location}@anchor{189}
+@anchor{cp/topics/expressions gccjit rvalue dereference__gccjit location}@anchor{18a}
@deffn {C++ Function} gccjit::lvalue gccjit::rvalue::dereference (gccjit::location loc)
Given an rvalue of pointer type @code{T *}, dereferencing the pointer,
@@ -13205,7 +13296,7 @@ If you don't need to specify the location, this can also be expressed using
an overloaded operator:
@geindex gccjit;;rvalue;;operator* (C++ function)
-@anchor{cp/topics/expressions gccjit rvalue mul-operator}@anchor{18a}
+@anchor{cp/topics/expressions gccjit rvalue mul-operator}@anchor{18b}
@deffn {C++ Function} gccjit::lvalue gccjit::rvalue::operator* ()
@example
@@ -13218,7 +13309,7 @@ gccjit::lvalue content = *ptr;
Field access is provided separately for both lvalues and rvalues:
@geindex gccjit;;lvalue;;access_field (C++ function)
-@anchor{cp/topics/expressions gccjit lvalue access_field__gccjit field gccjit location}@anchor{18b}
+@anchor{cp/topics/expressions gccjit lvalue access_field__gccjit field gccjit location}@anchor{18c}
@deffn {C++ Function} gccjit::lvalue gccjit::lvalue::access_field (gccjit::field field, gccjit::location loc)
Given an lvalue of struct or union type, access the given field,
@@ -13234,7 +13325,7 @@ in C.
@end deffn
@geindex gccjit;;rvalue;;access_field (C++ function)
-@anchor{cp/topics/expressions gccjit rvalue access_field__gccjit field gccjit location}@anchor{18c}
+@anchor{cp/topics/expressions gccjit rvalue access_field__gccjit field gccjit location}@anchor{18d}
@deffn {C++ Function} gccjit::rvalue gccjit::rvalue::access_field (gccjit::field field, gccjit::location loc)
Given an rvalue of struct or union type, access the given field
@@ -13250,7 +13341,7 @@ in C.
@end deffn
@geindex gccjit;;rvalue;;dereference_field (C++ function)
-@anchor{cp/topics/expressions gccjit rvalue dereference_field__gccjit field gccjit location}@anchor{18d}
+@anchor{cp/topics/expressions gccjit rvalue dereference_field__gccjit field gccjit location}@anchor{18e}
@deffn {C++ Function} gccjit::lvalue gccjit::rvalue::dereference_field (gccjit::field field, gccjit::location loc)
Given an rvalue of pointer type @code{T *} where T is of struct or union
@@ -13266,7 +13357,7 @@ in C, itself equivalent to @code{(*EXPR).FIELD}.
@end deffn
@geindex gccjit;;context;;new_array_access (C++ function)
-@anchor{cp/topics/expressions gccjit context new_array_access__gccjit rvalue gccjit rvalue gccjit location}@anchor{18e}
+@anchor{cp/topics/expressions gccjit context new_array_access__gccjit rvalue gccjit rvalue gccjit location}@anchor{18f}
@deffn {C++ Function} gccjit::lvalue gccjit::context::new_array_access (gccjit::rvalue ptr, gccjit::rvalue index, gccjit::location loc)
Given an rvalue of pointer type @code{T *}, get at the element @cite{T} at
@@ -13285,7 +13376,7 @@ in C (or, indeed, to @code{PTR + INDEX}).
Parameter "loc" is optional.
@end deffn
-For array accesses where you don't need to specify a @pxref{12a,,gccjit;;location},
+For array accesses where you don't need to specify a @pxref{12b,,gccjit;;location},
two overloaded operators are available:
@quotation
@@ -13325,7 +13416,7 @@ gccjit::lvalue element = array[0];
@c <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
@node Creating and using functions<2>,Source Locations<2>,Expressions<2>,Topic Reference<2>
-@anchor{cp/topics/functions doc}@anchor{18f}@anchor{cp/topics/functions creating-and-using-functions}@anchor{190}
+@anchor{cp/topics/functions doc}@anchor{190}@anchor{cp/topics/functions creating-and-using-functions}@anchor{191}
@subsection Creating and using functions
@@ -13338,36 +13429,36 @@ gccjit::lvalue element = array[0];
@end menu
@node Params<2>,Functions<2>,,Creating and using functions<2>
-@anchor{cp/topics/functions params}@anchor{191}
+@anchor{cp/topics/functions params}@anchor{192}
@subsubsection Params
@geindex gccjit;;param (C++ class)
-@anchor{cp/topics/functions gccjit param}@anchor{192}
+@anchor{cp/topics/functions gccjit param}@anchor{193}
@deffn {C++ Class} gccjit::param
A @cite{gccjit::param} represents a parameter to a function.
@end deffn
@geindex gccjit;;context;;new_param (C++ function)
-@anchor{cp/topics/functions gccjit context new_param__gccjit type cCP gccjit location}@anchor{f9}
+@anchor{cp/topics/functions gccjit context new_param__gccjit type cCP gccjit location}@anchor{fa}
@deffn {C++ Function} gccjit::param gccjit::context::new_param (gccjit::type type, const char* name, gccjit::location loc)
In preparation for creating a function, create a new parameter of the
given type and name.
@end deffn
-@pxref{192,,gccjit;;param} is a subclass of @pxref{184,,gccjit;;lvalue} (and thus
-of @pxref{14c,,gccjit;;rvalue} and @pxref{136,,gccjit;;object}). It is a thin
+@pxref{193,,gccjit;;param} is a subclass of @pxref{185,,gccjit;;lvalue} (and thus
+of @pxref{14d,,gccjit;;rvalue} and @pxref{137,,gccjit;;object}). It is a thin
wrapper around the C API's @pxref{25,,gcc_jit_param *}.
@node Functions<2>,Blocks<2>,Params<2>,Creating and using functions<2>
-@anchor{cp/topics/functions functions}@anchor{193}
+@anchor{cp/topics/functions functions}@anchor{194}
@subsubsection Functions
@geindex gccjit;;function (C++ class)
-@anchor{cp/topics/functions gccjit function}@anchor{194}
+@anchor{cp/topics/functions gccjit function}@anchor{195}
@deffn {C++ Class} gccjit::function
A @cite{gccjit::function} represents a function - either one that we're
@@ -13375,7 +13466,7 @@ creating ourselves, or one that we're referencing.
@end deffn
@geindex gccjit;;context;;new_function (C++ function)
-@anchor{cp/topics/functions gccjit context new_function__enum gccjit type cCP std vector param R i gccjit location}@anchor{195}
+@anchor{cp/topics/functions gccjit context new_function__enum gccjit type cCP std vector param R i gccjit location}@anchor{196}
@deffn {C++ Function} gccjit::function gccjit::context::new_function (enum gcc_jit_function_kind, gccjit::type return_type, const char* name, std::vector<param>& params, int is_variadic, gccjit::location loc)
Create a gcc_jit_function with the given name and parameters.
@@ -13386,29 +13477,29 @@ This is a wrapper around the C API's @pxref{11,,gcc_jit_context_new_function()}.
@end deffn
@geindex gccjit;;context;;get_builtin_function (C++ function)
-@anchor{cp/topics/functions gccjit context get_builtin_function__cCP}@anchor{196}
+@anchor{cp/topics/functions gccjit context get_builtin_function__cCP}@anchor{197}
@deffn {C++ Function} gccjit::function gccjit::context::get_builtin_function (const char* name)
This is a wrapper around the C API's
-@pxref{c9,,gcc_jit_context_get_builtin_function()}.
+@pxref{ca,,gcc_jit_context_get_builtin_function()}.
@end deffn
@geindex gccjit;;function;;get_param (C++ function)
-@anchor{cp/topics/functions gccjit function get_param__iC}@anchor{197}
+@anchor{cp/topics/functions gccjit function get_param__iC}@anchor{198}
@deffn {C++ Function} gccjit::param gccjit::function::get_param (int index) const
Get the param of the given index (0-based).
@end deffn
@geindex gccjit;;function;;dump_to_dot (C++ function)
-@anchor{cp/topics/functions gccjit function dump_to_dot__cCP}@anchor{10c}
+@anchor{cp/topics/functions gccjit function dump_to_dot__cCP}@anchor{10d}
@deffn {C++ Function} void gccjit::function::dump_to_dot (const char* path)
Emit the function in graphviz format to the given path.
@end deffn
@geindex gccjit;;function;;new_local (C++ function)
-@anchor{cp/topics/functions gccjit function new_local__gccjit type cCP gccjit location}@anchor{103}
+@anchor{cp/topics/functions gccjit function new_local__gccjit type cCP gccjit location}@anchor{104}
@deffn {C++ Function} gccjit::lvalue gccjit::function::new_local (gccjit::type type, const char* name, gccjit::location loc)
Create a new local variable within the function, of the given type and
@@ -13416,19 +13507,19 @@ name.
@end deffn
@node Blocks<2>,Statements<2>,Functions<2>,Creating and using functions<2>
-@anchor{cp/topics/functions blocks}@anchor{198}
+@anchor{cp/topics/functions blocks}@anchor{199}
@subsubsection Blocks
@geindex gccjit;;block (C++ class)
-@anchor{cp/topics/functions gccjit block}@anchor{199}
+@anchor{cp/topics/functions gccjit block}@anchor{19a}
@deffn {C++ Class} gccjit::block
A @cite{gccjit::block} represents a basic block within a function i.e. a
sequence of statements with a single entry point and a single exit
point.
-@pxref{199,,gccjit;;block} is a subclass of @pxref{136,,gccjit;;object}.
+@pxref{19a,,gccjit;;block} is a subclass of @pxref{137,,gccjit;;object}.
The first basic block that you create within a function will
be the entrypoint.
@@ -13442,7 +13533,7 @@ one function.
@end deffn
@geindex gccjit;;function;;new_block (C++ function)
-@anchor{cp/topics/functions gccjit function new_block__cCP}@anchor{19a}
+@anchor{cp/topics/functions gccjit function new_block__cCP}@anchor{19b}
@deffn {C++ Function} gccjit::block gccjit::function::new_block (const char* name)
Create a basic block of the given name. The name may be NULL, but
@@ -13452,12 +13543,12 @@ messages.
@end deffn
@node Statements<2>,,Blocks<2>,Creating and using functions<2>
-@anchor{cp/topics/functions statements}@anchor{19b}
+@anchor{cp/topics/functions statements}@anchor{19c}
@subsubsection Statements
@geindex gccjit;;block;;add_eval (C++ function)
-@anchor{cp/topics/functions gccjit block add_eval__gccjit rvalue gccjit location}@anchor{180}
+@anchor{cp/topics/functions gccjit block add_eval__gccjit rvalue gccjit location}@anchor{181}
@deffn {C++ Function} void gccjit::block::add_eval (gccjit::rvalue rvalue, gccjit::location loc)
Add evaluation of an rvalue, discarding the result
@@ -13473,7 +13564,7 @@ This is equivalent to this C code:
@end deffn
@geindex gccjit;;block;;add_assignment (C++ function)
-@anchor{cp/topics/functions gccjit block add_assignment__gccjit lvalue gccjit rvalue gccjit location}@anchor{105}
+@anchor{cp/topics/functions gccjit block add_assignment__gccjit lvalue gccjit rvalue gccjit location}@anchor{106}
@deffn {C++ Function} void gccjit::block::add_assignment (gccjit::lvalue lvalue, gccjit::rvalue rvalue, gccjit::location loc)
Add evaluation of an rvalue, assigning the result to the given
@@ -13489,7 +13580,7 @@ lvalue = rvalue;
@end deffn
@geindex gccjit;;block;;add_assignment_op (C++ function)
-@anchor{cp/topics/functions gccjit block add_assignment_op__gccjit lvalue enum gccjit rvalue gccjit location}@anchor{109}
+@anchor{cp/topics/functions gccjit block add_assignment_op__gccjit lvalue enum gccjit rvalue gccjit location}@anchor{10a}
@deffn {C++ Function} void gccjit::block::add_assignment_op (gccjit::lvalue lvalue, enum gcc_jit_binary_op, gccjit::rvalue rvalue, gccjit::location loc)
Add evaluation of an rvalue, using the result to modify an
@@ -13519,7 +13610,7 @@ loop_body.add_assignment_op (
@end deffn
@geindex gccjit;;block;;add_comment (C++ function)
-@anchor{cp/topics/functions gccjit block add_comment__cCP gccjit location}@anchor{114}
+@anchor{cp/topics/functions gccjit block add_comment__cCP gccjit location}@anchor{115}
@deffn {C++ Function} void gccjit::block::add_comment (const char* text, gccjit::location loc)
Add a no-op textual comment to the internal representation of the
@@ -13533,7 +13624,7 @@ Parameter "loc" is optional.
@end deffn
@geindex gccjit;;block;;end_with_conditional (C++ function)
-@anchor{cp/topics/functions gccjit block end_with_conditional__gccjit rvalue gccjit block gccjit block gccjit location}@anchor{108}
+@anchor{cp/topics/functions gccjit block end_with_conditional__gccjit rvalue gccjit block gccjit block gccjit location}@anchor{109}
@deffn {C++ Function} void gccjit::block::end_with_conditional (gccjit::rvalue boolval, gccjit::block on_true, gccjit::block on_false, gccjit::location loc)
Terminate a block by adding evaluation of an rvalue, branching on the
@@ -13554,7 +13645,7 @@ block, boolval, on_true, and on_false must be non-NULL.
@end deffn
@geindex gccjit;;block;;end_with_jump (C++ function)
-@anchor{cp/topics/functions gccjit block end_with_jump__gccjit block gccjit location}@anchor{19c}
+@anchor{cp/topics/functions gccjit block end_with_jump__gccjit block gccjit location}@anchor{19d}
@deffn {C++ Function} void gccjit::block::end_with_jump (gccjit::block target, gccjit::location loc)
Terminate a block by adding a jump to the given target block.
@@ -13569,7 +13660,7 @@ goto target;
@end deffn
@geindex gccjit;;block;;end_with_return (C++ function)
-@anchor{cp/topics/functions gccjit block end_with_return__gccjit rvalue gccjit location}@anchor{19d}
+@anchor{cp/topics/functions gccjit block end_with_return__gccjit rvalue gccjit location}@anchor{19e}
@deffn {C++ Function} void gccjit::block::end_with_return (gccjit::rvalue rvalue, gccjit::location loc)
Terminate a block.
@@ -13603,7 +13694,7 @@ return;
@end deffn
@geindex gccjit;;block;;end_with_switch (C++ function)
-@anchor{cp/topics/functions gccjit block end_with_switch__gccjit rvalue gccjit block std vector gccjit case_ gccjit location}@anchor{19e}
+@anchor{cp/topics/functions gccjit block end_with_switch__gccjit rvalue gccjit block std vector gccjit case_ gccjit location}@anchor{19f}
@deffn {C++ Function} void gccjit::block::end_with_switch (gccjit::rvalue expr, gccjit::block default_block, std::vector<gccjit::case_> cases, gccjit::location loc)
Terminate a block by adding evalation of an rvalue, then performing
@@ -13646,14 +13737,14 @@ The API entrypoints relating to switch statements and cases:
@itemize *
@item
-@pxref{19e,,gccjit;;block;;end_with_switch()}
+@pxref{19f,,gccjit;;block;;end_with_switch()}
@item
-@pxref{19f,,gccjit;;context;;new_case()}
+@pxref{1a0,,gccjit;;context;;new_case()}
@end itemize
@end quotation
-were added in @pxref{d7,,LIBGCCJIT_ABI_3}; you can test for their presence
+were added in @pxref{d8,,LIBGCCJIT_ABI_3}; you can test for their presence
using
@example
@@ -13663,21 +13754,21 @@ using
@noindent
@geindex gccjit;;block;;end_with_switch;;gccjit;;case_ (C++ class)
-@anchor{cp/topics/functions gccjit block end_with_switch gccjit case_}@anchor{1a0}
+@anchor{cp/topics/functions gccjit block end_with_switch gccjit case_}@anchor{1a1}
@deffn {C++ Class} gccjit::case_
@end deffn
A @cite{gccjit::case_} represents a case within a switch statement, and
-is created within a particular @pxref{122,,gccjit;;context} using
-@pxref{19f,,gccjit;;context;;new_case()}. It is a subclass of
-@pxref{136,,gccjit;;object}.
+is created within a particular @pxref{123,,gccjit;;context} using
+@pxref{1a0,,gccjit;;context;;new_case()}. It is a subclass of
+@pxref{137,,gccjit;;object}.
Each case expresses a multivalued range of integer values. You
can express single-valued cases by passing in the same value for
both @cite{min_value} and @cite{max_value}.
@geindex gccjit;;block;;end_with_switch;;gccjit;;context;;new_case (C++ function)
-@anchor{cp/topics/functions gccjit block end_with_switch gccjit context new_case__gccjit rvalue gccjit rvalue gccjit block}@anchor{19f}
+@anchor{cp/topics/functions gccjit block end_with_switch gccjit context new_case__gccjit rvalue gccjit rvalue gccjit block}@anchor{1a0}
@deffn {C++ Function} gccjit::case_* gccjit::context::new_case (gccjit::rvalue min_value, gccjit::rvalue max_value, gccjit::block dest_block)
Create a new gccjit::case for use in a switch statement.
@@ -13788,12 +13879,12 @@ create_code (gcc_jit_context *c_ctxt, void *user_data)
@c <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
@node Source Locations<2>,Compiling a context<2>,Creating and using functions<2>,Topic Reference<2>
-@anchor{cp/topics/locations source-locations}@anchor{1a1}@anchor{cp/topics/locations doc}@anchor{1a2}
+@anchor{cp/topics/locations source-locations}@anchor{1a2}@anchor{cp/topics/locations doc}@anchor{1a3}
@subsection Source Locations
@geindex gccjit;;location (C++ class)
-@anchor{cp/topics/locations gccjit location}@anchor{12a}
+@anchor{cp/topics/locations gccjit location}@anchor{12b}
@deffn {C++ Class} gccjit::location
A @cite{gccjit::location} encapsulates a source code location, so that
@@ -13804,10 +13895,10 @@ single-step through your language.
@cite{gccjit::location} instances are optional: you can always omit them
from any C++ API entrypoint accepting one.
-You can construct them using @pxref{118,,gccjit;;context;;new_location()}.
+You can construct them using @pxref{119,,gccjit;;context;;new_location()}.
You need to enable @pxref{42,,GCC_JIT_BOOL_OPTION_DEBUGINFO} on the
-@pxref{122,,gccjit;;context} for these locations to actually be usable by
+@pxref{123,,gccjit;;context} for these locations to actually be usable by
the debugger:
@example
@@ -13818,7 +13909,7 @@ ctxt.set_bool_option (GCC_JIT_BOOL_OPTION_DEBUGINFO, 1);
@end deffn
@geindex gccjit;;context;;new_location (C++ function)
-@anchor{cp/topics/locations gccjit context new_location__cCP i i}@anchor{118}
+@anchor{cp/topics/locations gccjit context new_location__cCP i i}@anchor{119}
@deffn {C++ Function} gccjit::location gccjit::context::new_location (const char* filename, int line, int column)
Create a @cite{gccjit::location} instance representing the given source
@@ -13831,13 +13922,13 @@ location.
@end menu
@node Faking it<2>,,,Source Locations<2>
-@anchor{cp/topics/locations faking-it}@anchor{1a3}
+@anchor{cp/topics/locations faking-it}@anchor{1a4}
@subsubsection Faking it
If you don't have source code for your internal representation, but need
to debug, you can generate a C-like representation of the functions in
-your context using @pxref{129,,gccjit;;context;;dump_to_file()}:
+your context using @pxref{12a,,gccjit;;context;;dump_to_file()}:
@example
ctxt.dump_to_file ("/tmp/something.c",
@@ -13869,13 +13960,13 @@ file, giving you @emph{something} you can step through in the debugger.
@c <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
@node Compiling a context<2>,,Source Locations<2>,Topic Reference<2>
-@anchor{cp/topics/compilation compiling-a-context}@anchor{1a4}@anchor{cp/topics/compilation doc}@anchor{1a5}
+@anchor{cp/topics/compilation compiling-a-context}@anchor{1a5}@anchor{cp/topics/compilation doc}@anchor{1a6}
@subsection Compiling a context
-Once populated, a @pxref{122,,gccjit;;context} can be compiled to
-machine code, either in-memory via @pxref{fb,,gccjit;;context;;compile()} or
-to disk via @pxref{1a6,,gccjit;;context;;compile_to_file()}.
+Once populated, a @pxref{123,,gccjit;;context} can be compiled to
+machine code, either in-memory via @pxref{fc,,gccjit;;context;;compile()} or
+to disk via @pxref{1a7,,gccjit;;context;;compile_to_file()}.
You can compile a context multiple times (using either form of
compilation), although any errors that occur on the context will
@@ -13888,12 +13979,12 @@ prevent any future compilation of that context.
@end menu
@node In-memory compilation<2>,Ahead-of-time compilation<2>,,Compiling a context<2>
-@anchor{cp/topics/compilation in-memory-compilation}@anchor{1a7}
+@anchor{cp/topics/compilation in-memory-compilation}@anchor{1a8}
@subsubsection In-memory compilation
@geindex gccjit;;context;;compile (C++ function)
-@anchor{cp/topics/compilation gccjit context compile}@anchor{fb}
+@anchor{cp/topics/compilation gccjit context compile}@anchor{fc}
@deffn {C++ Function} gcc_jit_result* gccjit::context::compile ()
This calls into GCC and builds the code, returning a
@@ -13904,19 +13995,19 @@ This is a thin wrapper around the
@end deffn
@node Ahead-of-time compilation<2>,,In-memory compilation<2>,Compiling a context<2>
-@anchor{cp/topics/compilation ahead-of-time-compilation}@anchor{1a8}
+@anchor{cp/topics/compilation ahead-of-time-compilation}@anchor{1a9}
@subsubsection Ahead-of-time compilation
Although libgccjit is primarily aimed at just-in-time compilation, it
can also be used for implementing more traditional ahead-of-time
-compilers, via the @pxref{1a6,,gccjit;;context;;compile_to_file()} method.
+compilers, via the @pxref{1a7,,gccjit;;context;;compile_to_file()} method.
@geindex gccjit;;context;;compile_to_file (C++ function)
-@anchor{cp/topics/compilation gccjit context compile_to_file__enum cCP}@anchor{1a6}
+@anchor{cp/topics/compilation gccjit context compile_to_file__enum cCP}@anchor{1a7}
@deffn {C++ Function} void gccjit::context::compile_to_file (enum gcc_jit_output_kind, const char* output_path)
-Compile the @pxref{122,,gccjit;;context} to a file of the given
+Compile the @pxref{123,,gccjit;;context} to a file of the given
kind.
This is a thin wrapper around the
@@ -13941,7 +14032,7 @@ This is a thin wrapper around the
@c <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
@node Internals,Indices and tables,C++ bindings for libgccjit,Top
-@anchor{internals/index internals}@anchor{1a9}@anchor{internals/index doc}@anchor{1aa}
+@anchor{internals/index internals}@anchor{1aa}@anchor{internals/index doc}@anchor{1ab}
@chapter Internals
@@ -13956,7 +14047,7 @@ This is a thin wrapper around the
@end menu
@node Working on the JIT library,Running the test suite,,Internals
-@anchor{internals/index working-on-the-jit-library}@anchor{1ab}
+@anchor{internals/index working-on-the-jit-library}@anchor{1ac}
@section Working on the JIT library
@@ -13993,7 +14084,7 @@ gcc/libgccjit.so.0.0.1: ELF 64-bit LSB shared object, x86-64, version 1 (SYSV),
Here's what those configuration options mean:
@geindex command line option; --enable-host-shared
-@anchor{internals/index cmdoption--enable-host-shared}@anchor{1ac}
+@anchor{internals/index cmdoption--enable-host-shared}@anchor{1ad}
@deffn {Option} --enable-host-shared
Configuring with this option means that the compiler is built as
@@ -14002,7 +14093,7 @@ but it necessary for a shared library.
@end deffn
@geindex command line option; --enable-languages=jit@comma{}c++
-@anchor{internals/index cmdoption--enable-languages}@anchor{1ad}
+@anchor{internals/index cmdoption--enable-languages}@anchor{1ae}
@deffn {Option} --enable-languages=jit,c++
This specifies which frontends to build. The JIT library looks like
@@ -14021,7 +14112,7 @@ c++: error trying to exec 'cc1plus': execvp: No such file or directory
@end deffn
@geindex command line option; --disable-bootstrap
-@anchor{internals/index cmdoption--disable-bootstrap}@anchor{1ae}
+@anchor{internals/index cmdoption--disable-bootstrap}@anchor{1af}
@deffn {Option} --disable-bootstrap
For hacking on the "jit" subdirectory, performing a full
@@ -14031,7 +14122,7 @@ the compiler can still bootstrap itself.
@end deffn
@geindex command line option; --enable-checking=release
-@anchor{internals/index cmdoption--enable-checking}@anchor{1af}
+@anchor{internals/index cmdoption--enable-checking}@anchor{1b0}
@deffn {Option} --enable-checking=release
The compile can perform extensive self-checking as it runs, useful when
@@ -14042,7 +14133,7 @@ disable this self-checking.
@end deffn
@node Running the test suite,Environment variables,Working on the JIT library,Internals
-@anchor{internals/index running-the-test-suite}@anchor{1b0}
+@anchor{internals/index running-the-test-suite}@anchor{1b1}
@section Running the test suite
@@ -14105,7 +14196,7 @@ and once a test has been compiled, you can debug it directly:
@end menu
@node Running under valgrind,,,Running the test suite
-@anchor{internals/index running-under-valgrind}@anchor{1b1}
+@anchor{internals/index running-under-valgrind}@anchor{1b2}
@subsection Running under valgrind
@@ -14153,7 +14244,7 @@ When running under valgrind, it's best to have configured gcc with
various known false positives.
@node Environment variables,Packaging notes,Running the test suite,Internals
-@anchor{internals/index environment-variables}@anchor{1b2}
+@anchor{internals/index environment-variables}@anchor{1b3}
@section Environment variables
@@ -14161,7 +14252,7 @@ When running client code against a locally-built libgccjit, three
environment variables need to be set up:
@geindex environment variable; LD_LIBRARY_PATH
-@anchor{internals/index envvar-LD_LIBRARY_PATH}@anchor{1b3}
+@anchor{internals/index envvar-LD_LIBRARY_PATH}@anchor{1b4}
@deffn {Environment Variable} LD_LIBRARY_PATH
@quotation
@@ -14183,7 +14274,7 @@ libgccjit.so.0.0.1: ELF 64-bit LSB shared object, x86-64, version 1 (GNU/Linux),
@end deffn
@geindex environment variable; PATH
-@anchor{internals/index envvar-PATH}@anchor{1b4}
+@anchor{internals/index envvar-PATH}@anchor{1b5}
@deffn {Environment Variable} PATH
The library uses a driver executable for converting from .s assembler
@@ -14202,7 +14293,7 @@ of development.
@end deffn
@geindex environment variable; LIBRARY_PATH
-@anchor{internals/index envvar-LIBRARY_PATH}@anchor{1b5}
+@anchor{internals/index envvar-LIBRARY_PATH}@anchor{1b6}
@deffn {Environment Variable} LIBRARY_PATH
The driver executable invokes the linker, and the latter needs to locate
@@ -14238,11 +14329,11 @@ hello world
@noindent
@node Packaging notes,Overview of code structure,Environment variables,Internals
-@anchor{internals/index packaging-notes}@anchor{1b6}
+@anchor{internals/index packaging-notes}@anchor{1b7}
@section Packaging notes
-The configure-time option @pxref{1ac,,--enable-host-shared} is needed when
+The configure-time option @pxref{1ad,,--enable-host-shared} is needed when
building the jit in order to get position-independent code. This will
slow down the regular compiler by a few percent. Hence when packaging gcc
with libgccjit, please configure and build twice:
@@ -14253,10 +14344,10 @@ with libgccjit, please configure and build twice:
@itemize *
@item
-once without @pxref{1ac,,--enable-host-shared} for most languages, and
+once without @pxref{1ad,,--enable-host-shared} for most languages, and
@item
-once with @pxref{1ac,,--enable-host-shared} for the jit
+once with @pxref{1ad,,--enable-host-shared} for the jit
@end itemize
@end quotation
@@ -14300,7 +14391,7 @@ popd
@noindent
@node Overview of code structure,Design notes,Packaging notes,Internals
-@anchor{internals/index overview-of-code-structure}@anchor{1b7}
+@anchor{internals/index overview-of-code-structure}@anchor{1b8}
@section Overview of code structure
@@ -14766,7 +14857,7 @@ JIT: gcc::jit::logger::~logger()
@noindent
@node Design notes,,Overview of code structure,Internals
-@anchor{internals/index design-notes}@anchor{1b8}
+@anchor{internals/index design-notes}@anchor{1b9}
@section Design notes
@@ -14779,7 +14870,7 @@ close as possible to the error; failing that, a good place is within
@code{recording::context::validate ()} in jit-recording.c.
@node Indices and tables,Index,Internals,Top
-@anchor{index indices-and-tables}@anchor{1b9}
+@anchor{index indices-and-tables}@anchor{1ba}
@unnumbered Indices and tables