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Posted in reply to Denis | Denis <2korden at gmail.com> wrote: > On Sun, Oct 10, 2010 at 12:54 AM, Simen Kjaeraas <simen.kjaras at gmail.com> wrote: >> Andrei Alexandrescu <andrei at erdani.com> wrote: >>> >>> * "this(string msg, string file = __FILE__, size_t line = __LINE__, >>> Throwable next = null) nothrow" -> the __FILE__ and __LINE__ are >>> useless >>> (they are yours, not your caller's). You need to make them template >>> parameters to work, see other places in Phobos. At least that's what I >>> recall. Walter? >> >> You're wrong, they are replaced at call point. >> > > I could swear it worked like Andrei said, but apparently it's not. Oh well, we live and learn?. As could I, but I figured I'd check. Live and learn, indeed. -- Simen |
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Posted in reply to Simen Kjaeraas | On 10/9/10 15:54 CDT, Simen Kjaeraas wrote: > Andrei Alexandrescu <andrei at erdani.com> wrote: >> * "this(string msg, string file = __FILE__, size_t line = __LINE__, Throwable next = null) nothrow" -> the __FILE__ and __LINE__ are useless (they are yours, not your caller's). You need to make them template parameters to work, see other places in Phobos. At least that's what I recall. Walter? > > You're wrong, they are replaced at call point. Thanks for the correction. For enforce() I advocated the hack to Walter in template arguments, and he introduced it. Now I see he introduced it in two places. FWIW I think this is a welcome irregularity in default args as well; you almost never care about the callee's __FILE__ and __LINE__ in a default argument. >> long convert(TUnit from, TUnit to)(long); > > Couldn't this be more succinct by copying std.conv.to's system? > > i.e: > assert( convert!years( months( 24 ) ) == 2 ); This would be the case if we go with separate types for duration units (years, months,...), but not if we use long throughout. My thought for simplification: go with one 128-bit Duration (which is now JointDuration) and then have it offer @properties such as e.g. years() returning double. Andrei |
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Posted in reply to Andrei Alexandrescu | Andrei Alexandrescu <andrei at erdani.com> wrote: >> assert( convert!years( months( 24 ) ) == 2 ); > > This would be the case if we go with separate types for duration units (years, months,...), but not if we use long throughout. Or if months() is a function returning the appropriate long. -- Simen |
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Posted in reply to Simen Kjaeraas | On 10/9/10 17:22 CDT, Simen Kjaeraas wrote:
> Andrei Alexandrescu <andrei at erdani.com> wrote:
>>> assert( convert!years( months( 24 ) ) == 2 );
>>
>> This would be the case if we go with separate types for duration units (years, months,...), but not if we use long throughout.
>
> Or if months() is a function returning the appropriate long.
I see. So years() and months() would return a long that is internally understood to represent a specific unit for the interval.
By the way there's a disconnect at the junction between weeks and months due to the day-in-a-month irregularity, which the docs mention too.
So, three options:
a) long+conventions all the way
b) one type per duration notion (year, month, week, ..., second, hnsecond)
c) one unified type of duration that serves as an intermediary for all conversions. So getting the years from months would go months -> unified duration -> years.
Currently the library is very undecided and does a bit of which. We should simplify and go with one all the way.
Andrei
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Posted in reply to Jonathan M Davis | I suggest you generate html documentation and attach it. I can put it on my website.
Andrei
On 10/8/10 19:01 CDT, Jonathan M Davis wrote:
> I should probably add that the seven modules aren't exactly equal in size. In particular datetime.all only has its module documentation and public imports for all of the other modules, and datetime.other is quite small. I didn't necessarily split the code into modules in the best manner. I split it more on concepts than the amount of code in them (so datetime.timepoint probably has close to half of the code in it). I'm open to suggestions if someone has a better way to split the code up. Ideally, it would all be in one module, but it was too much for one.
>
> Also, as much as there is, a large portion of it is unit tests and documentation. There's definitely more unit tests than normal code, and there might be more documentation than normal code.
>
> One point that may need to be improved is the module documentation so that it's more obvious exactly what you need to just get the time and print it out or whatever the insanely simple operations are that would be typical in your average program that does little with the time. I am afraid that it is a bit like std.algorithm in that it's quite easy to use but a bit overwhelming to look at so that you _think_ that it's hard to use, even though it really isn't. I do have quite a few examples it the code though, and I hope that the documentation is generally clear enough. I tried to make it so that it was, but it really needs to have people who aren't familiar with it judge it at this point.
>
> - Jonathan M Davis
> _______________________________________________
> phobos mailing list
> phobos at puremagic.com
> http://lists.puremagic.com/mailman/listinfo/phobos
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Posted in reply to Andrei Alexandrescu | On Saturday 09 October 2010 12:27:26 Andrei Alexandrescu wrote: > On 10/8/10 16:04 CDT, Jonathan M Davis wrote: > > Okay. Here is my current datetime code for review. > > Solid work. I'm on vacation and I gave it a thorough read last night. David's parallelism library would have come first, but that's not vacation reading... > > A word of caution. I've been on the boost mailing list for a good while and they have the best review process ever. The result is invariably twofold: (a) a very good quality library; (b) a suicidal-depressive library author. Totally understandable. I am by no means claiming that what I've done is perfect. > > You need to expect to take quite a few hits from me and others, but please don't take it personally. Also, a word for the other reviewers: it's much easier (and therefore more luring) to bury a submission for its weaknesses instead of suggesting concrete steps to make it stronger. > > High-level thoughts > =================== > > * At 40KLOC, the library is probably on a par with the first Netscape browser. This is a bit extravagant for a date and time library, and last thing we want is Phobos to become a collection of elaborate trivialities (I'm not saying date/time is a trivial matter, but of the 40KLOC there are probably only a couple thousand that do actual work, of which a couple hundred that do nontrivial work). We should look into ways to reduce its sheer size, and, most importantly, the size of its user-visible API. (More concrete suggestions to follow.) Much of the file size is due to unit tests and documentation rather than then main code, so I think that it's more of a question of the size of the API rather than the file size. > * The library has a fundamental inconsistency: it can't decide whether it goes with sheer "long" representation for various durations (days, months, hnseconds etc.) versus typed representations (MonthDuration, HNDuration, JointDuration).This hurts everybody everywhere: the library spends real estate to implement durations, and then the API explodes because it doesn't use them so it needs to be explicit about measurement units. For example, we have a hecatomb of addXxx functions: addDays, addWeeks, addThis, addThat, addTheOther. The design should have exploited typed durations and support += for durations. Then you write d += add(weeks(3)); and so on. The main problem with using only durations to add is the AllowDayOverflow issue. You can deal with it with the add functions but not with operator overloads (though you cauld have a name function for adding durations which took an AllowDayOverflow). Also, at the moment, the durations use the addXXX functions to actually implement arithmetic with time points. There's also the issue of rollXXX which seems a bit funny to me to use with durations (it would have to use a named function instead of operator overloading regardless). I could alter add and roll to take durations instead of longs and then make it so that there's only addDuration (instead of addTUnit()). Without a duration type per time unit type, however, you can't really roll time units with durations. Java has add(int field, int amount) and roll(int field, int amount) functions, and I believe that at the time I stared putting in the addXXX() and rollXXX() functions, I was thinking that it was rather annoying to have to give it a number fo the time unit rather than just naming it, and so I ended up creating functions for each type that made since on a given time point and had addTUnit() and rollTUnit() for generic code. It did result in an awful lot of functions though, so I do agree that it's not exactly ideal as is. I will have to look at what all of the implications are of removing them though. > * Speaking of which, we come back at Walter's point: should we go with "long" for representing various durations and then make the meaning clear with function names, OR should we go with explicit strong types for times and durations? It's a good question, and arguments could be made for either case. Using "long" would probably trim away 60% of the code size. On the other hand, if we look at successful date and time libraries, we see that they do tend to be elaborate about granular types. So my suggestion is to not mess with success and go with elaborate typing. BUT I do want to cut a good fraction of sheer repetition by use of the language. AND I also want to not be able to find "long" in the library except in e.g. multiplication of a duration with a scalar and in the private definition of the typed abstractions. > > * This brings me to one beef I have: the library is repetitive and tedious. This is because it makes very little use of generative and generic capabilities. Most of it could have been written in C with structs and functions. I'll follow up with concrete suggestions. I ended up making it fairly easy to _use_ in generic code, I believe, but it doesn't do much to generate code, which does indeed result in a lot of generic and repetitive code. > * The library uses at least one actively unrecommended technique (global alias for built-ins) and one questionable or at least not-yet-widely-used technique (use of a class as a namespace). Explanations follow. > > Details > ======= > > * core.d is by far the weakest part of the library. In fact, it being the first one I've read, I got biased early on against the library. I'm very glad I continued to read through. > > * Global aliases of the form > > alias short Year; /// Unit for holding a Gregorian year. > > are a poor technique in C, C++, and D. I've read articles and rants about it in several places. In brief, the problem is that such aliases lure their user into thinking they are genuine types with the usual safeguards that types offer (such as disallowing illegal operations during compilation time and/or run time). > > DayOfMonth dom; > Month m; > ... > m += dom; // won't compile I guess?!? > dom = 32; // throw I suppose?!? > > Recommendation: eliminate these. At best make them private and give them the "Rep" (representation) suffix. But I suspect you don't even need them. They were meant primarily to better document what a function took (like Year, MonthOfYear, DayOfMonth rather than int, int, int) and they restrict the range of what you can feed a function (like short instead of int), but they are rather ugly and using anything smaller than int gets a bit annoying to use as I found in the unit tests. It does have the advantage of making sure that the programmer restricts their values to the smaller size, but since the smaller size still isn't the exact range required for the given value (e.g. 1 - 12 for months or 1 - 31 for days), it doesn't really help all that much anyway. It also creates greater confusion when various other functions (like addXXX()) take longs, though if I did it correctly, that it least manages to indicate when you use a value in a specific range rather than x amount of a time unit (e.g. the exact month vs the number of months to add). It certainly isn't the greatest as is though, and I'm more than open to fixing it. The main one that I'm leary on fixing is StdTime (and AdjustedTime) since it has a specific meaning beyond long and it helps with the documentation. But ideally, programmers would use such functions very sparingly anyway, since SysTime wraps and deals with most of that for you. > > * This enum: > > enum Month : MonthOfYear { jan = 1, /// January. > feb, /// February. > mar, /// March. > apr, /// April. > may, /// May. > jun, /// June. > jul, /// July. > aug, /// August. > sep, /// September. > oct, /// October. > nov, /// November. > dec /// December. > } > > The doc comments are not needed. Just put "/// Month" for the first and "/// Ditto" for all others. > > * Similar remark about comments to: > > enum DayOfWeek : ushort { sunday = 0, /// Sunday. > monday, /// Monday. > tuesday, /// Tuesday. > wednesday, /// Wednesday. > thursday, /// Thursday. > friday, /// Friday. > saturday /// Saturday. > } > > The names are self-explanatory, no need to repeat them! I added the individual enume comments at the last minute as soon as I realized that for some reason putting ddoc comments on the enum itself didn't result in the enum values being shown in the documentation (highly negative in my opinion - maybe I should add an enhancement request for that). The names _should_ definitely be self explanatory, but since I had to add comments on them for them to end up in the docs, and the docs put the space for the comment regardless of whether I put the comment, I just put the full names there. Personally, I'd much prefer to have /++ ddoc comment for enum +/ enum Month : MonthOfYear {jan = 1, feb, mar, apr, may, jun, jul, aug, sep, oct, nov, dec } in the file and have them listed that way in the generated ddoc without having a single line per enum value and without my having to put a comment on each one. Being _able_ to put a comment on each one is all well and good, but _having_ to is irritating. > I also notice > that (a) DayOfWeek uses ushort directly (why not ubyte?) instead of > going through a global alias (like Month) that I'd recommend you remove > anyway. Hmm. I would have thought that I'd have used ubyte for DayOfWeek, but I guess that I didn't. I've found dealing with types smaller than int annoying enough though, that I may just make it so that only the interior representation uses the smaller types and the API ditches them (especially when I get rid of names like Year and Month). > * These types suggest to me that we need to finally implement a Bounded type such that Bounded!(ubyte, 1, 7) would be a good representation for a day of week. We discussed Bounded a fair amount in the newsgroup a while ago. I think that could save a lot of code down the road (e.g. in duration.d), in addition to being a good library artifact of its own. That would indeed be useful.l Restriting to smaller types isn't enough because their range is still too large. It's also _highly_ annoying when it comes to using them because of the necessary conversions. And since the conversions don't even do the job to get the value down to the exact range required, increasingly I don't think that they're really worth it. > * This enum and its kin: > > enum AllowDayOverflow > { > /// Yes, allow day overflow. > yes, > > /// No, don't allow day overflow. > no > } > > should be like this: > > enum AllowDayOverflow > { > /// No, don't allow day overflow. > no, > /// Yes, allow day overflow. > yes > } > > such that code can write: > > void fun(AllowDayOverflow allowDayOverflow) { > ... > if (allowDayOverflow) ... > ... > if (!allowDayOverflow) ... > } > > Right now writing such works but with the reverse effect. Very good point. I didn't think of that. > > * "this(string msg, string file = __FILE__, size_t line = __LINE__, Throwable next = null) nothrow" -> the __FILE__ and __LINE__ are useless (they are yours, not your caller's). You need to make them template parameters to work, see other places in Phobos. At least that's what I recall. Walter? I was _sure_ that the default arguments were filled in at the call site... And they do! This program ----------- main module import other; void main() { writeval(); } --------- other module import std.stdio; void writeval(string file = __FILE__, size_t line = __LINE__) { writefln("%s(%s)", file, line); } prints main.d(5) Or am I misunderstanding what you're saying? > * "final class TUnitConv" used as a namespace. Can't we organize things such that we introduce few enough names for such namespaces to be unneeded? Well, with it seemed like a good way to organize some of the code, and when I originally created it, and I was looking to reduce how much was thrown into the namespace on importing datetime. And with a to!() function, it seemed even more critical to create such a namespace. For Clock, Dur, and IRange, however (which are similar namespaces), I really do think that the added namespacing is well worth it. It makes the code much clearer. Dur in particular would be bad to have its functions separated out, because then you have functions like years(), months(), and days() which are going to conflict all over the place with variable names. > > * "static long to(TUnit tuFrom, TUnit tuTo)(long value)" is a spark of brilliance that I'd love to see a lot more of. It's essentially the difference between reading and memorizing 90 function names versus memorizing one function name and an enum with 10 values. That being said, the rest of the code sadly doesn't transform this spark into a full-blown explosion - it goes right back to triviality such as e.g. hnsecsToDays. Those are hardly needed in the implementation (use template constraints) and DEFINITELY not needed in the documentation. They just pollute it. Yes. making the conversion functions which to!() uses private would be a good idea. I should have thought of that. Originally, I was just going to write them all, until I realized the cominatorial explosion of functions that that would cause and ended up creating to!() instead. > Suggestions: (a) throw TUnitConv away; (b) define this and friends at > global scope: > > long convert(TUnit from, TUnit to)(long); I'm not sure if convert is descriptive enough (TUnitConv.to!() has the distinct advantage of being quite explicit even if it isn't very pretty), but given how little is in TUnitConv, that's probably a good idea. > That being said, convert() does go against the grain of elaborate typing for durations. I'd accept it as a low-level function, but really the library currently fosters elaborate types for durations... so there's a disconnect here. The library itself needs it regardless. As for user code, well sometimes they may very well need to deal with converting seconds to minutes and the like, so I think that it's worthwhile to have in the API, but it's not something that I'd expect to be heavily used. > * To be specific: throw away yearsToMonths et al. No need for them. Well, they either need to exist internally or be inlined in TUnitConv.to!() (or whatever it gets renamed to), but I do agree that there's no need for them in the API. > * I suggest even experimenting with strings instead of TUnit. Really TUnit is a vestige from C++ and Java, but we do accept string template parameters so how about > > assert(convert!("years", "months")(2) == 24); > > etc. Opinions? My first concern would be performance, but if they're templates and template functions, then that isn't really an issue. Hmmm... My first reaction to that is definitely negative, but on further reflection, it is starting to look like at least a decent idea of not an outright good one. It _feels_ like there should be something wrong with it, but TUnit is effectily just a bunch of ints that have to be checked with template constraints, and this is just a bunch of strings that would have to be checked with template constraints. I'll have to think about it further, but it is starting to look like a good idea. > * All string functions in core.d make me nervous because they hint to no support for locales, and are very pedestrian as they go. I'd prefer at least some sort of table with names for "year", "years" etc. in conjunction with reusable code, instead of rigid, nonreusable code with inline strings. Same about monthOfYearToString etc. Understandale. I didn't really know a better what to do it since it's not like we have internationalzition support built into D or Phobos. Sure, we have _unicode_ support, but that obviously isn't the same thing. I'll have to think of a clean way to do that with a table of some kind. > > * validXxx and validXxxOfYyy is in desperate need for a template approach a la to/convert. Virtually anything that encodes types in function names is such a candidate. It does to some extent, though some of them (like for the day of the month) require rather different parameters than the rest. Still, that could be dealt with with a template specialization. There's also not currently any generic way to define what the values should be tested _against_, so I'll have to think of a good way to make that work. It does seem like a good idea though. > * As another random example: > > DayOfWeek getDayOfWeek(DayOfGregorianCal day) pure nothrow > > could/should be (in client use): > > get!(TUnit.dayOfWeek, TUnit.dayOfGregorianCal)(day); Since those functions would all have to be have specialized version of such templates, I'm not sure how much you gain with that approach - particularly when there aren't very many of those functions (and IIIRC they're all package or private rather than in the API). But it may be worth doing something like that. I'm more skeptical of this suggestion than the others though. > * Generally, it's clear from above why I was displeased with core.d. At 1952 lines, it's a lot of pain for very little gain. It encodes date artifacts in function names leading to an explosion of API functions. It uses too little generic mechanisms to reduce both API size and implementation size. datetime.core was entirely intended to hold stuff that most of the other modules needed rather than be all that useful on its own (as I discussed in my responses to Walter, I really was looking for everything to be in one module, but the file was getting to be too large. I attempted to split it up, and I didn't necessarily do so in the best manner). And it's mostly helper function stuff, so some of it wasn't necessarily originally intended to be in the public API, but I put it there at the last minute since it seemed like a user might find it useful (like the validXXX and enforceXXX functions). > * On to duration.d. It's simple: there's no need for three durations. Rename JointDuration to Duration and throw everything else. I'd find myself hard pressed to produce situations in which efficiency considerations make it impossible to cope with a 128-bit representation. > > * If you do want to go fine-grained durations without the aggravation, use templates. Then you can have Duration!HNSeconds, Duration!Seconds, Duration!Months, whatever you want, without inflicting pain on yourself and others. If you play your cards right, such durations would match 100% the templates you define in core.d and elsewhere so you don't need to make a lot of implementation effort. BUT again I think one duration is enough. Maximum two - short duration and duration. I really don't think that this is going to work, and the problem is months and years (they frequently seem to be the problem) due to the fact that they don't have a uniform number of days. Originally, I had a Duration struct templated on TUnit, but it resulted in several problems - the biggest having to do with addition/subtraction. You can't convert months or years to units smaller than months, and you can't convert anything smaller than a month to months or years without a specific date. So, you can't add a Duration!month and Duration!day no matter how it may seem like you should be able to. Many durationos _could_ be added - such as Duration!day and Duration!hour - but the variable sizes of months and years poses a big problem for that. To fix the problem, you need a duration which joins the two - hence JointDuration. That way, you can write user code like Dur.years(7) + Dur.days(2) and have it work. The way I'd originally done that resulted in a combinatorial explosion of joint duration types (it was effctively templated on the types of duraton that you'd added together to create it), so I just combined the months+ and sub-months durations into two types. It cuts down on the amount of generated code at least. And your suggestion to just have JointDuration has some merit, but doesn't work with the current scheme. The problem is that a time point can (conceptually at least) cover any range of time units. It could be years only or just months and days, or it could be only seconds. Practically-speaking, at present, they all cover at minimum years - days, except for TimeOfDay. Right now, with duration types separating out months+ and sub-months, you can have the compiler enforce whether a particular duration can be added to a particular type of time point. So, if you try and add a MonthDuration to a TimeOfDay, it won't compile (since it doesn't have any months in it). If you tried to just have JointDuration, the compiler can no longer make such a guarantee, and you'd end up with run time errors instead of compile-time errors. Now, we could say that we're only worried about the types of time points which are defined in std.datetime and are not worried about user-defined time point types, and then say that we don't care about adding months or years to a TimeOfDay because it really has no effect when you think about it (regardless of how many days that is), and then it would be possible to just have a JointDuration. But for better-or-worse, that would mean no user-defined time points, or at least, it would become problematic for them. Now, I'm not sure that we really care about that. In making the code deal with the multiple time point types that I defined, it was relatively easy to make it so that it would work with user-defined time points, so I did. That doesn't mean that we need to care or worry about that. Honestly, I would expect _very_ few programmers to even ever think about doing it, and the types that I've defined should cover all but fairly exotic requirements for time points. So, I could definitely look at reducing the durations down to a single JointDuration. One problem with that, however, is that that could get really ugly for comparing durations (which is code that I noticed yesterday that I forgot to add - it's on the code on my machine now though). How do you compare a duration which holds both months and smaller units? You could have a duration which is 5 months and 702 days and another which is 15 months and 2 hours. Which is larger? Sure, in this case, we can see that it's the first one, but once you get to something like 3 months in one and 2 months and 30 days in the other, what do you do? Depending on which months we're talking about, either of them could be greater or they could be equal. And since a duration is used to indicate the difference between two time points, it's a given that programmers will want to compare them. So, while I think that you have some good points, I'm not sure that what you suggest really improves things at all. I'm totally open to better suggestions, but the variable number of days in a month and a in a year is a very annoying problem here. Also, it should be noted, that programmers would create all durations by either using arithmetic on type points or by using the functions in Dur - e.g. Dur.years(), Dur.days(), or Dur.seconds(), and that combined with auto eliminates most cases where the programmer needs to care about what the type of a duration actually is - the one glaring exception being a function parameter which would then likely need to be templatized. So, while the multiple duration types is annoying, I think that I've managed to asbstract the issue away for the most part. Also, there's TickDuration (which was SHOO's Ticks), which I made to work as a duration (since it is one) but needs to stay separate for reasons of precision. Though I don't think that programmers using std.datetime will have much call for creating those directly. > * timezone.d looks okay. > > * At 23KLOC, timepoint.d better had a walkOnWater() function in there. > > * currLocalTime, currUTC, currOtherTZ should be > current!(TUnit.localTime), current!(TUnit.utc) - bringing again API > consolidation into discussion. Hmmm. Well, they're basically just a different time zone class, so it could become something like currTime(TimeZone tz = LocalTime.instance). I was trying to make it so that programmers who didn't want to worry about time zones didn't have to though, so whatever changes were made to reduce function duplication like this should try and make it so that the programmer can choose to not specificy the time zone and end up with local time. > (need to finish this just about here) > > * other.d - bad name. Like Walter, I think the physical design should be one .di file and one or more .d files. Well, like I said before, the current module division isn't necessarily all that great, and what I'd really like is a single module from the perspective of the users of the module, so .di files seems like a good idea. I wasn't really aware of them before (I'm sure that I'd seen them mentioned before, but I haven't seen them discussed much, and I'm not particularly familiar with them), so I didn't think of that. > * Duration and Interval should be consolidated. As in the types or the modules? The types can't be cleanly consolidated because they're distinct concepts. As for the modules, I have no problem with that. It's just that Boost (and thus my code) is base on the three concepts of time points, time durations, and time intervals, so it seemed like a good way to split up the module. - Jonathan M Davis |
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Posted in reply to Andrei Alexandrescu | On Saturday 09 October 2010 17:15:06 Andrei Alexandrescu wrote:
> I suggest you generate html documentation and attach it. I can put it on my website.
I included it in the compressed tar file that I linked to. It has a Src folder and a Doc folder. Src holds the .d files and Doc holds the generated html files.
- Jonathan M Davis
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Posted in reply to Jonathan M Davis | I believe in D one should be able to write a RangedInt(int lowerBound, int upperBound) type that would make sure it contains value in the range specified (that would require runtime checks, but I think that's acceptable, those check can be disabled in release). Could be suitable for DayOfWeek, Month, etc. |
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Posted in reply to Andrei Alexandrescu | Yes, please do. I don't plan on reviewing datetime in detail because I don't know much about the more complex use cases for it (the stuff that makes the design nontrivial), but I'd like to look at the public API in a way that makes the forest easily visible through the trees and see whether the simple things that I would use it for are sufficiently simple. On Sat, Oct 9, 2010 at 8:15 PM, Andrei Alexandrescu <andrei at erdani.com>wrote: > I suggest you generate html documentation and attach it. I can put it on my website. > > Andrei > > > On 10/8/10 19:01 CDT, Jonathan M Davis wrote: > >> I should probably add that the seven modules aren't exactly equal in size. >> In >> particular datetime.all only has its module documentation and public >> imports for >> all of the other modules, and datetime.other is quite small. I didn't >> necessarily split the code into modules in the best manner. I split it >> more on >> concepts than the amount of code in them (so datetime.timepoint probably >> has >> close to half of the code in it). I'm open to suggestions if someone has a >> better way to split the code up. Ideally, it would all be in one module, >> but it >> was too much for one. >> >> Also, as much as there is, a large portion of it is unit tests and >> documentation. There's definitely more unit tests than normal code, and >> there >> might be more documentation than normal code. >> >> One point that may need to be improved is the module documentation so that >> it's >> more obvious exactly what you need to just get the time and print it out >> or >> whatever the insanely simple operations are that would be typical in your >> average program that does little with the time. I am afraid that it is a >> bit >> like std.algorithm in that it's quite easy to use but a bit overwhelming >> to look >> at so that you _think_ that it's hard to use, even though it really isn't. >> I do >> have quite a few examples it the code though, and I hope that the >> documentation >> is generally clear enough. I tried to make it so that it was, but it >> really >> needs to have people who aren't familiar with it judge it at this point. >> >> - Jonathan M Davis >> _______________________________________________ >> phobos mailing list >> phobos at puremagic.com >> http://lists.puremagic.com/mailman/listinfo/phobos >> > _______________________________________________ > phobos mailing list > phobos at puremagic.com > http://lists.puremagic.com/mailman/listinfo/phobos > -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://lists.puremagic.com/pipermail/phobos/attachments/20101009/76fe17a7/attachment.html> |
October 09, 2010 [phobos] datetime review | ||||
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Posted in reply to David Simcha | On Saturday 09 October 2010 20:06:29 David Simcha wrote: > Yes, please do. I don't plan on reviewing datetime in detail because I don't know much about the more complex use cases for it (the stuff that makes the design nontrivial), but I'd like to look at the public API in a way that makes the forest easily visible through the trees and see whether the simple things that I would use it for are sufficiently simple. Well, like I said in my reply to Andrei, the html files are included in the Doc directory of the tarball that my link is to: http://is.gd/fS35q Unfortunately, they don't look as nice as Phobos' documentation (since I just used the default ddoc output), but they're there. I do think, however, that the biggest thing to worry about in reviewing my datetime code (or most any code which is submitted for review) is the API. The actual innards are of secondary concern. Sure, they should be reviewed, and in some cases (like your parallelism code), they should probably be reviewed in great detail, but first and foremost is the API. Once we have a good API, we can deal with fixing the implementation later if need be, but the API needs to be more or less correct from the start. - Jonathan M Davis |
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