It was implemented only for the Half type and not the others, and I just
felt like using it on a vector now, 12 years after the Vector class got
first added.
Because it somewhat confusingly may have implied that it's really
composed of 8-bit bools, and not bits. The same reasoning was used to
pick the name for Corrade's Containers::BitArray.
Backwards compatibility aliases are in place as usual, however the
internal BoolVectorConverter is now BitVectorConverter and there
unfortunately cannot be any backwards compatibility. This breaks only
GLM and Eigen integration in the magnum-integration repo, which I'm
fixing immediately. I don't expect any user code to use this internal
helper. For regular vectors maybe, for this one definitely not.
This makes it possible to conveniently do things like
Containers::StridedArrayView1D<Float> array = …;
Vector4 vector{NoInit};
Utility::copy(array, vector); // or the other way around
which is especially useful together with the new JSON classes. In some
cases this means the function is no longer constexpr, but those weren't
constexpr because it was useful for anything, they were only because it
was possible. So this breakage shouldn't do any harm I think.
Certain Clang-based IDEs (CLion) "emulate" a compiler by inheriting all
its defines, which means one gets __clang__ defined but also __GNUC__
set to 11 or whatever, breaking all these assumptions.
The old one is deprecated, and will be removed in a future release.
Unfortunately, to avoid deprecation warnings, all use of NoInit in the
Math library temporarily have to be Magnum::NoInit This will be cleaned
up when the deprecated alias is removed.
The thing is:
* Doing std::abs() and comparing to some epsilon value is crazy thing
to do with integers.
* When using unsigned integers, Clang rightfully complained that
calling std::abs() on these is a sign of insanity. This fixes it too.
Doesn't solve problem I hoped it would solve (adding pointer and
Vector<1, size_t> still doesn't compile), breaks GCC 4.7 build in some
crazy way and makes certain previously-working operations (like
operator== on Vector<1, int> and int) ambiguous. Not worth pursuing
further, I think.
This reverts commit ca0892f026.
This reverts commit d6d0fd1890.
I don't know why, but marking the output of copy constructor of any
subclass or output of conversion operator of any class as constexpr
causes MSVC to complain about non-constant expression.
Probably just another bug.