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| <section id="function.faq" last-revision="$Date: 2006-11-03 11:41:10 -0800 (Fri, 03 Nov 2006) $"> |
| <title>Frequently Asked Questions</title> |
| |
| <qandaset> |
| <qandaentry> |
| <question><para>Why can't I compare |
| <classname>boost::function</classname> objects with |
| <code>operator==</code> or |
| <code>operator!=</code>?</para></question> |
| |
| <answer> |
| <para>Comparison between <classname>boost::function</classname> |
| objects cannot be implemented "well", and therefore will not be |
| implemented. The typical semantics requested for <code>f == |
| g</code> given <classname>boost::function</classname> objects |
| <code>f</code> and <code>g</code> are:</para> |
| <itemizedlist> |
| <listitem><simpara>If <code>f</code> and <code>g</code> |
| store function objects of the same type, use that type's |
| <code>operator==</code> to compare |
| them.</simpara></listitem> |
| |
| <listitem><simpara>If <code>f</code> and <code>g</code> |
| store function objects of different types, return |
| <code>false</code>.</simpara></listitem> |
| </itemizedlist> |
| <para>The problem occurs when the type of the function objects |
| stored by both <code>f</code> and <code>g</code> doesn't have an |
| <code>operator==</code>: we would like the expression <code>f == |
| g</code> to fail to compile, as occurs with, e.g., the standard |
| containers. However, this is not implementable for |
| <classname>boost::function</classname> because it necessarily |
| "erases" some type information after it has been assigned a |
| function object, so it cannot try to call |
| <code>operator==</code> later: it must either find a way to call |
| <code>operator==</code> now, or it will never be able to call it |
| later. Note, for instance, what happens if you try to put a |
| <code>float</code> value into a |
| <classname>boost::function</classname> object: you will get an |
| error at the assignment operator or constructor, not in |
| <code>operator()</code>, because the function-call expression |
| must be bound in the constructor or assignment operator.</para> |
| |
| <para>The most promising approach is to find a method of |
| determining if <code>operator==</code> can be called for a |
| particular type, and then supporting it only when it is |
| available; in other situations, an exception would be |
| thrown. However, to date there is no known way to detect if an |
| arbitrary operator expression <code>f == g</code> is suitably |
| defined. The best solution known has the following undesirable |
| qualities:</para> |
| |
| <orderedlist> |
| <listitem><simpara>Fails at compile-time for objects where |
| <code>operator==</code> is not accessible (e.g., because it is |
| <code>private</code>).</simpara></listitem> |
| |
| <listitem><simpara>Fails at compile-time if calling |
| <code>operator==</code> is ambiguous.</simpara></listitem> |
| |
| <listitem><simpara>Appears to be correct if the |
| <code>operator==</code> declaration is correct, even though |
| <code>operator==</code> may not compile.</simpara></listitem> |
| </orderedlist> |
| |
| <para>All of these problems translate into failures in the |
| <classname>boost::function</classname> constructors or |
| assignment operator, <emphasis>even if the user never invokes |
| operator==</emphasis>. We can't do that to users.</para> |
| |
| <para>The other option is to place the burden on users that want |
| to use <code>operator==</code>, e.g., by providing an |
| <code>is_equality_comparable</code> trait they may |
| specialize. This is a workable solution, but is dangerous in |
| practice, because forgetting to specialize the trait will result |
| in unexpected exceptions being thrown from |
| <classname>boost::function</classname>'s |
| <code>operator==</code>. This essentially negates the usefulness |
| of <code>operator==</code> in the context in which it is most |
| desired: multitarget callbacks. The |
| <libraryname>Signals</libraryname> library has a way around |
| this.</para> |
| </answer> |
| </qandaentry> |
| |
| <qandaentry> |
| <question><para>I see void pointers; is this [mess] type safe?</para></question> |
| <answer> |
| <para>Yes, <computeroutput>boost::function</computeroutput> is type |
| safe even though it uses void pointers and pointers to functions |
| returning void and taking no arguments. Essentially, all type |
| information is encoded in the functions that manage and invoke |
| function pointers and function objects. Only these functions are |
| instantiated with the exact type that is pointed to by the void |
| pointer or pointer to void function. The reason that both are required |
| is that one may cast between void pointers and object pointers safely |
| or between different types of function pointers (provided you don't |
| invoke a function pointer with the wrong type). </para> |
| </answer> |
| </qandaentry> |
| |
| <qandaentry> |
| <question><para>Why are there workarounds for void returns? C++ allows them!</para></question> |
| <answer><para>Void returns are permitted by the C++ standard, as in this code snippet: |
| <programlisting>void f(); |
| void g() { return f(); }</programlisting> |
| </para> |
| |
| <para> This is a valid usage of <computeroutput>boost::function</computeroutput> because void returns are not used. With void returns, we would attempting to compile ill-formed code similar to: |
| <programlisting>int f(); |
| void g() { return f(); }</programlisting> |
| </para> |
| |
| <para> In essence, not using void returns allows |
| <computeroutput>boost::function</computeroutput> to swallow a return value. This is |
| consistent with allowing the user to assign and invoke functions and |
| function objects with parameters that don't exactly match.</para> |
| |
| </answer> |
| </qandaentry> |
| |
| <qandaentry> |
| <question><para>Why (function) cloning?</para></question> |
| <answer> |
| <para>In November and December of 2000, the issue of cloning |
| vs. reference counting was debated at length and it was decided |
| that cloning gave more predictable semantics. I won't rehash the |
| discussion here, but if it cloning is incorrect for a particular |
| application a reference-counting allocator could be used.</para> |
| </answer> |
| </qandaentry> |
| |
| <qandaentry> |
| <question><para>How much overhead does a call through <code><classname>boost::function</classname></code> incur?</para></question> |
| <answer> |
| <para>The cost of <code>boost::function</code> can be reasonably |
| consistently measured at around 20ns +/- 10 ns on a modern >2GHz |
| platform versus directly inlining the code.</para> |
| |
| <para>However, the performance of your application may benefit |
| from or be disadvantaged by <code>boost::function</code> |
| depending on how your C++ optimiser optimises. Similar to a |
| standard function pointer, differences of order of 10% have been |
| noted to the benefit or disadvantage of using |
| <code>boost::function</code> to call a function that contains a |
| tight loop depending on your compilation circumstances.</para> |
| |
| <para>[Answer provided by Matt Hurd. See <ulink url="http://article.gmane.org/gmane.comp.lib.boost.devel/33278"/>]</para> |
| </answer> |
| </qandaentry> |
| </qandaset> |
| |
| </section> |