> On Wednesday, February 05, 2003 3:04 PM [GMT+1=CET], > William E. Kempf <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > >> > What I would like to see is a new boost::thread implementation >> which meets the following requirements. >> > >> > a. There shall be two interfaces to a thread. One for creation of a >> thread, from >> > here on called boost::thread. And, one for the created thread, >> from >> > here on called boost::thread::self. >> >> Self? Why? If it's on operation that can *only* be made on the >> current thread, then a static method is a better approach. Otherwise, >> I could make a "self" instance and pass it to another thread, which >> could then attempt an operation that's not valid for calling on >> another thread. > > It would seem to me that, given the availability of p->yield() as a > syntax for invoking a static function, it'd be better to use a > namespace-scope function to avoid errors and for clarity.
OK, I can buy that over a seperate self class. This was discussed at one point, but the particular issue with p->yield() was never brought up. I'm not sure I find it compelling, because which thread yields should be evident from the documentation, and I don't see anyone ever using this syntax. But compelling or not, I'm not opposed to making this a free function if others think it's clearer in this regard. -- William E. Kempf [EMAIL PROTECTED] _______________________________________________ Unsubscribe & other changes: http://lists.boost.org/mailman/listinfo.cgi/boost
