Commit Graph

11 Commits (8aab0160d327d36dde1eb1c00f178453c5e69a7b)

Author SHA1 Message Date
whitequark 1249f8496e Enable exhaustive switch coverage warnings as an error, and use them.
Specifically, this enables -Wswitch=error on GCC/Clang and its MSVC
equivalent; the exact way it is handled varies slightly, but what
they all have in common is that in a switch statement over an
enumeration, any enumerand that is not explicitly (via case:) or
implicitly (via default:) handled in the switch triggers an error.

Moreover, we also change the switch statements in three ways:

  * Switch statements that ought to be extended every time a new
    enumerand is added (e.g. Entity::DrawOrGetDistance(), are changed
    to explicitly list every single enumerand, and not have a
    default: branch.

    Note that the assertions are kept because it is legal for
    a enumeration to have a value unlike any of its defined
    enumerands, and we can e.g. read garbage from a file, or
    an uninitialized variable. This requires some rearranging if
    a default: branch is undesired.

  * Switch statements that ought to only ever see a few select
    enumerands, are changed to always assert in the default: branch.

  * Switch statements that do something meaningful for a few
    enumerands, and ignore everything else, are changed to do nothing
    in a default: branch, under the assumption that changing them
    every time an enumerand is added or removed would just result
    in noise and catch no bugs.

This commit also removes the {Request,Entity,Constraint}::UNKNOWN and
Entity::DATUM_POINT enumerands, as those were just fancy names for
zeroes. They mess up switch exhaustiveness checks and most of the time
were not the best way to implement what they did anyway.
2016-05-26 12:43:52 +00:00
EvilSpirit f33ddc94fb Convert all enumerations to use `enum class`.
Specifically, take the old code that looks like this:

  class Foo {
    enum { X = 1, Y = 2 };
    int kind;
  }
  ... foo.kind = Foo::X; ...

and convert it to this:

  class Foo {
    enum class Kind : uint32_t { X = 1, Y = 2 };
    Kind kind;
  }
  ... foo.kind = Foo::Kind::X;

(In some cases the enumeration would not be in the class namespace,
such as when it is generally useful.)

The benefits are as follows:
  * The type of the field gives a clear indication of intent, both
    to humans and tools (such as binding generators).
  * The compiler is able to automatically warn when a switch is not
    exhaustive; but this is currently suppressed by the
      default: ssassert(false, ...)
    idiom.
  * Integers and plain enums are weakly type checked: they implicitly
    convert into each other. This can hide bugs where type conversion
    is performed but not intended. Enum classes are strongly type
    checked.
  * Plain enums pollute parent namespaces; enum classes do not.
    Almost every defined enum we have already has a kind of ad-hoc
    namespacing via `NAMESPACE_`, which is now explicit.
  * Plain enums do not have a well-defined ABI size, which is
    important for bindings. Enum classes can have it, if specified.
    We specify the base type for all enums as uint32_t, which is
    a safe choice and allows us to not change the numeric values
    of any variants.

This commit introduces absolutely no functional change to the code,
just renaming and change of types. It handles almost all cases,
except GraphicsWindow::pending.operation, which needs minor
functional change.
2016-05-25 07:17:14 +00:00
EvilSpirit 457ff78849 DXF, DWG: allow undoing an import. 2016-05-20 14:04:21 +00:00
whitequark ad4a204edf Replace all oops() checks with ssassert()s.
This includes explanation and context for non-obvious cases and
shortens debug cycles when just-in-time debugging is not available
(like on Linux) by immediately printing description of the assert
as well as symbolized backtrace.
2016-05-20 12:38:30 +00:00
whitequark ab418b827e Use the `override` C++ keyword everywhere.
This helps to ensure that a base class that changes underneath us
would not leave any overridden functions hanging.

This already highlighted some questionable use of GTKMM's API,
which were also fixed in this commit.
2016-05-18 18:42:33 +00:00
EvilSpirit 11919bf0c1 DXF: import "actual measurement" for dimensions. 2016-05-17 12:34:35 +00:00
whitequark e969bc94ad Enable -Wall -Wextra -Wno-unused-parameter on GCC/Clang.
This is good practice and helps to catch bugs. Several changes
were made to accomodate the newly enabled warnings:
  * -Wunused-function:
    * in exposed/, static functions that were supposed to be inlined
      were explicitly marked as inline;
    * some actually unused functions were removed;
  * -Wsign-compare: explicit conversions were added, and in
    the future we should find a nicer way than aux* fields;
  * -Wmissing-field-initializers: added initializers;
  * -Wreorder: reordered properly;
  * -Wunused-but-set-variable: remove variable.

-Wunused-parameter was turned off as enabling it would result in
massive amount of churn in UI code. Despite that, we should enable
it at some point as it has a fairly high SNR otherwise.
2016-05-08 00:01:35 +00:00
whitequark ee30fa2b0d Work around an MSVC 2013 bug related to unique_ptr.
The following bug is tickled by calling emplace() on a map with
non-copyable but moveable values:
https://connect.microsoft.com/VisualStudio/feedbackdetail/view/960021

Fortunately, we don't actually need emplace() here as operator[]
will create values if they aren't there.
2016-05-07 22:36:41 +00:00
whitequark d05e9a938b DWG: implement import.
Before this commit, the file filter suggested that DWG was readable,
but it wasn't.

Also, report any failures while reading DWG and DXF files.
2016-05-07 05:17:23 +00:00
EvilSpirit a21a327a97 DXF: create certain constraints during import.
Specifically:
  * point-coincident, horizontal and vertical constraints (inferred);
  * point-point and point-line distance, angle, radius and diameter
    constraints (based on DXF dimensions).
2016-05-07 04:02:34 +00:00
EvilSpirit 70d84b30e8 DXF: implement import. 2016-05-07 04:02:34 +00:00