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.
And update docs in Matrix[34]::rotation() and related functions to note
this. This is a breaking change that may cause existing code to start
asserting.
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.
And the Vector3 version 5% slower in Release, on GCC at least. FFS,
what was I thinking with the gather() things. Nice in user code,
extremely bad in library code.
This allows us to get rid of the StaticArrayView, which is the last
roadblock on the way to a single-header math. The planes() are now
deprecated, along with the include, and will get removed in a future
release.
Pros:
* faster compile times (#include <tuple> is 13k lines, ugh)
* ability to have NoInit and ZeroInit constructors
* ability to do fuzzy compare
* named members, so we don't have to use mutable std::tie()
Cons:
* ... none?
The old Color[34]::Hsv is still a tuple and the new ColorHsv is
convertible to/from it (and even std::tie() works). These are all
deprecated (along with the <tuple> include).
Since Range1D is now used all over Animation, the vector made it very
annoying to use. That's fixed now. This is a backwards-incompatible
change, but I don't expect the 1D range to be used much, mainly because
it was so shitty to use. Generic code that needs a vector can always
cast to it, like this:
Math::Vector<dimensions, T>{range.min()}
Test for the constructor from pair is no longer accepting pairs of 1D
vectors. I have no idea what I meant by that test case (it's testing the
same thing twice), so I removed one of these.