Files
test/source/blender/blenlib/BLI_index_range.hh
Hans Goudey 2551cf9087 Curves: Port fillet node to the new data-block
This commit ports the fillet curves node to the new curves data-block,
and moves the fillet node implementation to the geometry module to help
separate the implementation from the node.

The changes are similar to the subdivide node or resample node. I've
resused common utilities where it makes sense, though some things like
the iteration over attributes can be generalized further. The node
is now multi-threaded per-curve and inside each curve, and some buffers
are reused per curve to avoid many allocations.

The code is more explicit now, and though there is more boilerplate to
pass around many spans, the more complex logic should be more readable.

Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D15346
2022-07-19 18:50:27 -05:00

322 lines
8.1 KiB
C++

/* SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0-or-later */
#pragma once
/** \file
* \ingroup bli
*
* A `blender::IndexRange` wraps an interval of non-negative integers. It can be used to reference
* consecutive elements in an array. Furthermore, it can make for loops more convenient and less
* error prone, especially when using nested loops.
*
* I'd argue that the second loop is more readable and less error prone than the first one. That is
* not necessarily always the case, but often it is.
*
* for (int64_t i = 0; i < 10; i++) {
* for (int64_t j = 0; j < 20; j++) {
* for (int64_t k = 0; k < 30; k++) {
*
* for (int64_t i : IndexRange(10)) {
* for (int64_t j : IndexRange(20)) {
* for (int64_t k : IndexRange(30)) {
*
* Some containers like blender::Vector have an index_range() method. This will return the
* IndexRange that contains all indices that can be used to access the container. This is
* particularly useful when you want to iterate over the indices and the elements (much like
* Python's enumerate(), just worse). Again, I think the second example here is better:
*
* for (int64_t i = 0; i < my_vector_with_a_long_name.size(); i++) {
* do_something(i, my_vector_with_a_long_name[i]);
*
* for (int64_t i : my_vector_with_a_long_name.index_range()) {
* do_something(i, my_vector_with_a_long_name[i]);
*
* Ideally this could be could be even closer to Python's enumerate(). We might get that in the
* future with newer C++ versions.
*
* One other important feature is the as_span method. This method returns a Span<int64_t>
* that contains the interval as individual numbers.
*/
#include <algorithm>
#include <atomic>
#include <cmath>
#include <iostream>
#include "BLI_utildefines.h"
namespace blender {
template<typename T> class Span;
class IndexRange {
private:
int64_t start_ = 0;
int64_t size_ = 0;
public:
constexpr IndexRange() = default;
constexpr explicit IndexRange(int64_t size) : start_(0), size_(size)
{
BLI_assert(size >= 0);
}
constexpr IndexRange(int64_t start, int64_t size) : start_(start), size_(size)
{
BLI_assert(start >= 0);
BLI_assert(size >= 0);
}
class Iterator {
public:
using iterator_category = std::forward_iterator_tag;
using value_type = int64_t;
using pointer = const int64_t *;
using reference = const int64_t &;
using difference_type = std::ptrdiff_t;
private:
int64_t current_;
public:
constexpr explicit Iterator(int64_t current) : current_(current)
{
}
constexpr Iterator &operator++()
{
current_++;
return *this;
}
constexpr Iterator operator++(int) const
{
Iterator copied_iterator = *this;
++copied_iterator;
return copied_iterator;
}
constexpr friend bool operator!=(const Iterator &a, const Iterator &b)
{
return a.current_ != b.current_;
}
constexpr friend bool operator==(const Iterator &a, const Iterator &b)
{
return a.current_ == b.current_;
}
constexpr int64_t operator*() const
{
return current_;
}
};
constexpr Iterator begin() const
{
return Iterator(start_);
}
constexpr Iterator end() const
{
return Iterator(start_ + size_);
}
/**
* Access an element in the range.
*/
constexpr int64_t operator[](int64_t index) const
{
BLI_assert(index >= 0);
BLI_assert(index < this->size());
return start_ + index;
}
/**
* Two ranges compare equal when they contain the same numbers.
*/
constexpr friend bool operator==(IndexRange a, IndexRange b)
{
return (a.size_ == b.size_) && (a.start_ == b.start_ || a.size_ == 0);
}
/**
* Get the amount of numbers in the range.
*/
constexpr int64_t size() const
{
return size_;
}
/**
* Returns true if the size is zero.
*/
constexpr bool is_empty() const
{
return size_ == 0;
}
/**
* Create a new range starting at the end of the current one.
*/
constexpr IndexRange after(int64_t n) const
{
BLI_assert(n >= 0);
return IndexRange(start_ + size_, n);
}
/**
* Create a new range that ends at the start of the current one.
*/
constexpr IndexRange before(int64_t n) const
{
BLI_assert(n >= 0);
return IndexRange(start_ - n, n);
}
/**
* Get the first element in the range.
* Asserts when the range is empty.
*/
constexpr int64_t first() const
{
BLI_assert(this->size() > 0);
return start_;
}
/**
* Get the nth last element in the range.
* Asserts when the range is empty or when n is negative.
*/
constexpr int64_t last(const int64_t n = 0) const
{
BLI_assert(n >= 0);
BLI_assert(n < size_);
BLI_assert(this->size() > 0);
return start_ + size_ - 1 - n;
}
/**
* Get the element one before the beginning. The returned value is undefined when the range is
* empty, and the range must start after zero already.
*/
constexpr int64_t one_before_start() const
{
BLI_assert(start_ > 0);
return start_ - 1;
}
/**
* Get the element one after the end. The returned value is undefined when the range is empty.
*/
constexpr int64_t one_after_last() const
{
return start_ + size_;
}
/**
* Get the first element in the range. The returned value is undefined when the range is empty.
*/
constexpr int64_t start() const
{
return start_;
}
/**
* Returns true when the range contains a certain number, otherwise false.
*/
constexpr bool contains(int64_t value) const
{
return value >= start_ && value < start_ + size_;
}
/**
* Returns a new range, that contains a sub-interval of the current one.
*/
constexpr IndexRange slice(int64_t start, int64_t size) const
{
BLI_assert(start >= 0);
BLI_assert(size >= 0);
int64_t new_start = start_ + start;
BLI_assert(new_start + size <= start_ + size_ || size == 0);
return IndexRange(new_start, size);
}
constexpr IndexRange slice(IndexRange range) const
{
return this->slice(range.start(), range.size());
}
/**
* Returns a new IndexRange with n elements removed from the beginning of the range.
* This invokes undefined behavior when n is negative.
*/
constexpr IndexRange drop_front(int64_t n) const
{
BLI_assert(n >= 0);
const int64_t new_size = std::max<int64_t>(0, size_ - n);
return IndexRange(start_ + n, new_size);
}
/**
* Returns a new IndexRange with n elements removed from the end of the range.
* This invokes undefined behavior when n is negative.
*/
constexpr IndexRange drop_back(int64_t n) const
{
BLI_assert(n >= 0);
const int64_t new_size = std::max<int64_t>(0, size_ - n);
return IndexRange(start_, new_size);
}
/**
* Returns a new IndexRange that only contains the first n elements. This invokes undefined
* behavior when n is negative.
*/
constexpr IndexRange take_front(int64_t n) const
{
BLI_assert(n >= 0);
const int64_t new_size = std::min<int64_t>(size_, n);
return IndexRange(start_, new_size);
}
/**
* Returns a new IndexRange that only contains the last n elements. This invokes undefined
* behavior when n is negative.
*/
constexpr IndexRange take_back(int64_t n) const
{
BLI_assert(n >= 0);
const int64_t new_size = std::min<int64_t>(size_, n);
return IndexRange(start_ + size_ - new_size, new_size);
}
/**
* Move the range forward or backward within the larger array. The amount may be negative,
* but its absolute value cannot be greater than the existing start of the range.
*/
constexpr IndexRange shift(int64_t n) const
{
return IndexRange(start_ + n, size_);
}
/**
* Get read-only access to a memory buffer that contains the range as actual numbers.
*/
Span<int64_t> as_span() const;
friend std::ostream &operator<<(std::ostream &stream, IndexRange range)
{
stream << "[" << range.start() << ", " << range.one_after_last() << ")";
return stream;
}
private:
static std::atomic<int64_t> s_current_array_size;
static std::atomic<int64_t *> s_current_array;
Span<int64_t> as_span_internal() const;
};
} // namespace blender