Sent from my moss-covered three-handled family gradunza
> On Feb 21, 2017, at 9:04 AM, Jordan Rose <[email protected]> wrote: > > [Proposal: > https://github.com/apple/swift-evolution/blob/master/proposals/0104-improved-integers.md] > > Hi, Max (and Dave). I did have some questions about this revision: > >> Arithmetic and SignedArithmetic protocols have been renamed to Number and >> SignedNumber. > > What happens to NSNumber here? It feels like the same problem as Character > and (NS)CharacterSet. > > >> Endian-converting initializers and properties were added to the >> FixedWidthInteger protocol. > > This is the thing I have the biggest problem with. Endian conversions aren't > numeric operations, and you can't meaningfully mix numbers of different > endianness. That implies to me that numbers with different endianness should > have different types. I think there's a design to explore with > LittleEndian<Int> and BigEndian<Int>, and explicitly using those types > whenever you need to convert. I disagree. Nobody actually wants to compute with numbers in the wrong endianness for the machine. This is just used for corrections at the ends of wire protocols, where static type has no meaning. > Here's a sketch of such a thing: > > struct LittleEndian<Value: FixedWidthInteger> { > private var storage: Value > > public var value: Value { > #if little_endian > return storage > #else > return swapBytes(storage) > #endif > } > > public var bitPattern: Value { > return storage > } > > public var asBigEndian: BigEndian<Value> { > return BigEndian(value: self.value) > } > > public init(value: Value) { > #if little_endian > storage = value > #else > storage = swapBytes(value) > #endif > } > > public init(bitPattern: Value) { > storage = bitPattern > } > } > > I'm not saying this is the right solution, just that I suspect adding > Self-producing properties that change endianness is the wrong one. > >> /// The number of bits equal to 1 in this value's binary representation. >> /// >> /// For example, in a fixed-width integer type with a `bitWidth` value of >> 8, >> /// the number 31 has five bits equal to 1. >> /// >> /// let x: Int8 = 0b0001_1111 >> /// // x == 31 >> /// // x.popcount == 5 >> var popcount: Int { get >> } > > Is this property actually useful enough to put into a protocol? I know it's > defaulted, but it's already an esoteric operation; it seems unlikely that one > would need it in a generic context. (It's also definable for arbitrary > UnsignedIntegers as well as arbitrary FixedWidthIntegers.) The whole point is that you want to dispatch down to an LLVM instruction for this and not rely on the optimizer to collapse your loop into one. > > (I'm also still not happy with the non-Swifty name, but I see > "populationCount" or "numberOfOneBits" would probably be worse.) > > > Thanks in advance, > Jordan
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