doxygroups.cc

00001 /* 00002 Copyright (C) 2001, 2002 Free Software Foundation, Inc. 00003 See license.html for license. 00004 00005 This just provides documentation for stuff that doesn't need to be in the 00006 source headers themselves. It is a ".cc" file for the sole cheesy reason 00007 that it triggers many different text editors into doing Nice Things when 00008 typing comments. However, it is mentioned nowhere except the *cfg.in files. 00009 00010 Some actual code (declarations) is exposed here, but no compiler ever 00011 sees it. The decls must be visible to doxygen, and sometimes their real 00012 declarations are not visible, or not visible in a way we want. 00013 00014 Pieces separated by '// //' lines will usually not be presented to the 00015 user on the same page. 00016 */ 00017 00018 // // // // // // // // // // // // // // // // // // // // // // // // 00019 /** @namespace std 00020 * @brief Everything defined by the ISO C++ Standard is within namespace std. 00021 */ 00022 /** @namespace __gnu_cxx 00023 * @brief This namespace serves two purposes. 00024 * 00025 * This namespace is used for two things: 00026 * - sequestering internal (implementation-only) names away from the 00027 * global namespace; these are details of the implementation and should 00028 * not be touched by users 00029 * - GNU extensions for public use 00030 * 00031 * This is still fluid and changing rapidly. Currently the rule is: if an 00032 * entitity is found in the user-level documentation, it falls into the 00033 * second category. 00034 */ 00035 00036 // // // // // // // // // // // // // // // // // // // // // // // // 00037 /** @addtogroup SGIextensions STL extensions from SGI 00038 Because libstdc++-v3 based its implementation of the STL subsections of 00039 the library on the SGI 3.3 implementation, we inherited their extensions 00040 as well. 00041 00042 They are additionally documented in the 00043 <a href="http://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/libstdc++/documentation.html"> 00044 online documentation</a>, a copy of which is also shipped with the 00045 library source code (in .../docs/html/documentation.html). You can also 00046 read the documentation <a href="http://www.sgi.com/tech/stl/">on SGI's 00047 site</a>, which is still running even though the code is not maintained. 00048 00049 <strong>NB</strong> that the following notes are pulled from various 00050 comments all over the place, so they may seem stilted. 00051 <hr> 00052 */ 00053 00054 // // // // // // // // // // // // // // // // // // // // // // // // 00055 // This is standalone because, unlike the functor introduction, there is no 00056 // single header file which serves as a base "all containers must include 00057 // this header". We do some quoting of 14882 here. 00058 /** @addtogroup Containers Containers 00059 Containers are collections of objects. 00060 00061 A container may hold any type which meets certain requirements, but the type 00062 of contained object is chosen at compile time, and all objects in a given 00063 container must be of the same type. (Polymorphism is possible by declaring a 00064 container of pointers to a base class and then populating it with pointers to 00065 instances of derived classes. Variant value types such as the @c any class 00066 from <a href="http://www.boost.org/">Boost</a> can also be used. 00067 00068 All contained types must be @c Assignable and @c CopyConstructible. 00069 Specific containers may place additional requirements on the types of 00070 their contained objects. 00071 00072 Containers manage memory allocation and deallocation themselves when 00073 storing your objects. The objects are destroyed when the container is 00074 itself destroyed. Note that if you are storing pointers in a container, 00075 @c delete is @e not automatically called on the pointers before destroying them. 00076 00077 All containers must meet certain requirements, summarized in 00078 <a href="tables.html">tables</a>. 00079 00080 The standard containers are further refined into 00081 @link Sequences Sequences@endlink and 00082 @link Assoc_containers Associative Containers@endlink. 00083 */ 00084 00085 /** @addtogroup Sequences Sequences 00086 Sequences arrange a collection of objects into a strictly linear order. 00087 00088 The differences between sequences are usually due to one or both of the 00089 following: 00090 - memory management 00091 - algorithmic complexity 00092 00093 As an example of the first case, @c vector is required to use a contiguous 00094 memory layout, while other sequences such as @c deque are not. 00095 00096 The prime reason for choosing one sequence over another should be based on 00097 the second category of differences, algorithmic complexity. For example, if 00098 you need to perform many inserts and removals from the middle of a sequence, 00099 @c list would be ideal. But if you need to perform constant-time access to 00100 random elements of the sequence, then @c list should not be used. 00101 00102 All sequences must meet certain requirements, summarized in 00103 <a href="tables.html">tables</a>. 00104 */ 00105 00106 /** @addtogroup Assoc_containers Associative Containers 00107 Associative containers allow fast retrieval of data based on keys. 00108 00109 Each container type is parameterized on a @c Key type, and an ordering 00110 relation used to sort the elements of the container. 00111 00112 There should be more text here. 00113 00114 All associative containers must meet certain requirements, summarized in 00115 <a href="tables.html">tables</a>. 00116 */ 00117 00118 // // // // // // // // // // // // // // // // // // // // // // // // 00119 /** @namespace abi 00120 * @brief The cross-vendor C++ Application Binary Interface. 00121 * 00122 * A brief overview of an ABI is given in the libstdc++-v3 FAQ, question 00123 * 5.8 (you may have a copy of the FAQ locally, or you can view the online 00124 * version at http://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/libstdc++/faq/index.html#5_8). 00125 * 00126 * GCC subscribes to a relatively-new cross-vendor ABI for C++, sometimes 00127 * called the IA64 ABI because it happens to be the native ABI for that 00128 * platform. It is summarized at http://www.codesourcery.com/cxx-abi/ 00129 * along with the current specification. 00130 * 00131 * For users of GCC 3.x, entry points are available in <cxxabi.h>, which notes, 00132 * <em>"It is not normally necessary for user programs to include this header, 00133 * or use the entry points directly. However, this header is available 00134 * should that be needed."</em> 00135 */ 00136 00137 namespace abi { 00138 /** 00139 @brief New ABI-mandated entry point in the C++ runtime library for demangling. 00140 00141 @param mangled_name A NUL-terminated character string containing the name 00142 to be demangled. 00143 00144 @param output_buffer A region of memory, allocated with malloc, of 00145 @a *length bytes, into which the demangled name 00146 is stored. If @a output_buffer is not long enough, 00147 it is expanded using realloc. @a output_buffer may 00148 instead be NULL; in that case, the demangled name is 00149 placed in a region of memory allocated with malloc. 00150 00151 @param length If @a length is non-NULL, the length of the buffer containing 00152 the demangled name is placed in @a *length. 00153 00154 @param status @a *status is set to one of the following values: 00155 - 0: The demangling operation succeeded. 00156 - -1: A memory allocation failiure occurred. 00157 - -2: @a mangled_name is not a valid name under the C++ ABI 00158 mangling rules. 00159 - -3: One of the arguments is invalid. 00160 00161 @return A pointer to the start of the NUL-terminated demangled name, or NULL 00162 if the demangling fails. The caller is responsible for deallocating 00163 this memory using @c free. 00164 00165 00166 The demagling is performed using the C++ ABI mangling rules, with 00167 GNU extensions. For example, this function is used 00168 in __gnu_cxx::__verbose_terminate_handler. See 00169 http://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/libstdc++/18_support/howto.html#5 for other 00170 examples of use. 00171 00172 @note The same demangling functionality is available via libiberty 00173 (@c <libiberty/demangle.h> and @c libiberty.a) in GCC 3.1 and later, but that 00174 requires explicit installation (@c --enable-install-libiberty) and uses a 00175 different API, although the ABI is unchanged. 00176 */ 00177 char* __cxa_demangle (const char* mangled_name, char* output_buffer, 00178 size_t* length, int* status); 00179 } // namespace abi 00180 00181 // // // // // // // // // // // // // // // // // // // // // // // // 00182 /** @addtogroup binarysearch Binary search algorithms 00183 These algorithms are variations of a classic binary search. They all assume 00184 that the sequence being searched is already sorted. 00185 00186 The number of comparisons will be logarithmic (and as few as possible). 00187 The number of steps through the sequence will be logarithmic for 00188 random-access iterators (e.g., pointers), and linear otherwise. 00189 00190 The LWG has passed Defect Report 270, which notes: <em>The proposed 00191 resolution reinterprets binary search. Instead of thinking about searching 00192 for a value in a sorted range, we view that as an important special 00193 case of a more general algorithm: searching for the partition point in a 00194 partitioned range. We also add a guarantee that the old wording did not: 00195 we ensure that the upper bound is no earlier than the lower bound, that 00196 the pair returned by equal_range is a valid range, and that the first part 00197 of that pair is the lower bound.</em> 00198 00199 The actual effect of the first sentence is that a comparison functor 00200 passed by the user doesn't necessarily need to induce a strict weak ordering 00201 relation. Rather, it partitions the range. 00202 */ 00203 00204 // // // // // // // // // // // // // // // // // // // // // // // // 00205 /** @addtogroup setoperations Set operation algorithms 00206 These algorithms are common set operations performed on sequences that are 00207 already sorted. 00208 00209 The number of comparisons will be linear. 00210 */ 00211 00212 // // // // // // // // // // // // // // // // // // // // // // // // 00213 00214 // // // // // // // // // // // // // // // // // // // // // // // // 00215 /* * @addtogroup groupname description of group 00216 placeholder text 00217 */ 00218 00219 // // // // // // // // // // // // // // // // // // // // // // // // 00220 00221 // vim:et:noai: 00222

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