Unsolved Simplest way to for loop
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What is easyest way to loop range based?
for example i am tired of typing outfor(int a=0; a<b; a++);
Also cannot usefor(auto a:b)
as it wont provide index at;
Is it possible to dofor(int a=0:5)
to loop 0-5 or something simple like this? -
for (int a : {0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5}) {}
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Is this very bad practice?
#define afor(min,max) for(int i=min; i<max; i++) #define afor(max) for(int i=0; i<max; i++) afor(3) infoLine(n(c[i]));
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@Q139
Which bit of it? :) [I'll ignore then(c[i])
; I'll ignore the missing parentheses when you use the parameters.] I wouldn't replace afor
loop with a macro. I wouldn't define two macros which depend on how many arguments you pass them. Typing yourfor(int a=0; a<b; a++)
really doesn't seem like the end of the world to me, if that's the worst thing you have to worry about in C++ ... :)Quite why @jsulm gave you the suggestion he did I'm not sure, it's hardly a pattern to follow.
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@jsulm said in Simplest way to for loop:
for (int a : {0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5}) {}
How can i make a text macro to go for (int a : {0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5......1000000}) {}?
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@Q139 said:
How can i make a text macro to go for (int a : {0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5......1000000}) {}?
You could use
std::iota
:) Just joking. Don't do it, it's a bad idea to create a static range of consecutive numbers just to iterate over it. It's a waste of cycles and memory. There's nothing wrong withfor(int a=0; a<b; a++);
. Don't go into macros. They'll save you few keystrokes and then add 100x that if you ever need to debug that loop. -
@Chris-Kawa Why would it be significantly harder to debug?
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@Q139 I overshot with the 100x for dramatic effect ;) It's harder because you can clearly see the current value of a in the debugger (it's even in the tooltip on hover in QtCreator or VS). With macro you can do it too of course, but if you see the macro for the first time it looks like a function, so you need to go to its implementation, look up what's the name of the counter variable and then look that up in the debugger.
There's also the readability problem. Remember that you'll write this once and then it will be read a lot of times so making it readable should take priority over saving few keystrokes now and then. Most IDEs even have a snippet for this so you can make a for loop with a shortcut so that's not even saving you from typing that much.
Your example also shows another problem with this. To use the counter in the for body you need to know that the macro defines a counter that is calledi
. If you don't know that you need to look it up and someone reading it doesn't know whati
is at first glance. Also "Go to definition" will take you to the macro invocation which is just not helpful.I just can't see any compelling reason to use a macro in this case. What does it give you or your readers?
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@Chris-Kawa
Defining variable name to macro might help readability if debugger displays variables well.#define afor(v,max) for(int v=0; v<max; v++) afor(i,3) infoLine(n(c[i]));
Was also looking into macros support for text manipulation to make macro like
afor(i=1,3)
but it appears only avalible option is##
that appends text of macro function parameters
So just replaced = with comma and used 3 paramaters#define afor(v,min,max) for(int v=min; v<max; v++) afor(i,1,3)
Qt debugger displays variable value easyer now.
Only problem is that if i have 2 or more #defines with same name but dif argument lengths it wont find correct macro by arg length, it chooses last defined one. -
afor(i,1,3)
vs
for(int i=1; i<3; ++i)
Just my personal opinion but I think you're overdoing it. It's just not worth it.
afor
looks likeatoi
or some such function. It's misleading. It hinders even basic tasks like scanning visually for loops and whiles when you're looking for basic complexity markers in your code.
I mean go through say 50 random projects on github. I bet you none of them will try to obscure a for loop, basic language construct. -
@Q139 The general advice is to not use any macros in your code. There are a few exceptions to this rule. I personally like X macros for a few use cases. Also if I have a lot of repeated code that cannot be easily factored out into a function (switch over enums and types, ...) I do use macros. Repeated similar code also appears when overloading
operator+
,operator-
and so on for a user-defined type.However, in your case you are using a macro
afor
to introduce new syntax. This will make your code unreadable for anybody else (possibly also include the very popular 'future self').The major question usually is if you really need the running index. For your tiny example iteration over
infoLine(n(c[i]))
you can rewrite it to a range-based for loop:for(const auto &a : c) infoLine(n(a));
There are few cases where you actually need an actual index. C++20 helps out with this a little bit. You can now write:
for(int i = 0; const auto &a : c) { infoLine(n(a)); ... ++i; }
Personally, with a all the new features of C++20, like ranges and generators, I would really like to see someone implement something like this:
for(int i : "[0..10)"_rng) // numbers 0 through 9 ... for(int i : "[1..10]"_rng) // numbers 1 through 10 ...
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If you really want ranges then use boost:range
C++ will eventually get ranges. So you are future proofing your code for minimal changes. -
@SimonSchroeder said in Simplest way to for loop:
Personally, with a all the new features of C++20, like ranges and generators, I would really like to see someone implement something like this:
for(int i : "[0..10)"_rng) // numbers 0 through 9
...
for(int i : "[1..10]"_rng) // numbers 1 through 10
...Ah, the C++ code is JavaScript argument. Well, I really wish someone wouldn't.
auto
is terrible enough on its own, I personally don't need even more vague headaches. -
@SimonSchroeder said:
Personally, with a all the new features of C++20, like ranges and generators, I would really like to see someone implement something like this:
I was bored :P
auto operator"" _rng(const char* str, size_t len) { int start = atoi(str+1); int end = atoi(strrchr(str, '.') + 1); if (*str == '(') ++start; if (*(str+len-1) == ']') ++end; return ranges::views::iota(start, end); } int main() { for (auto i : "[1..10)"_rng) { std::cout << i << '\n'; } }
Please don't ever use this anywhere. No, seriously. It's a horrible waste.
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#define el(t) errorLine(t) #define il(t) infoLine(t) #define vo void #define re return #define ei else if #define el else #define w(c) while(c) //for loops zero index based #define f0(v,max) for(int v=0; v<max; v++) #define f(v,min,max) for(int v=min; v<max; v++) #define fRev(v,min,max) for(int v=max-1; v>=min; v--) #define fa(v,c) for(auto v:c) //data types #define D double #define F float //int types #define I int #define UI unsigned int #define L long int #define UL unsigned long int #define I64 qint64 #define I32 qint32 #define I16 qint16 #define U64 quint64 #define U32 quint32 #define U16 quint16 #define C char #define UC unsigned char #define B bool
I tryed coding with those , in some places i think it can actually increase readability ,if familiar with the macros.
Also single letter capital variable types make code look cleaner.
If i continue adding stuff some point 1-2 letter combos will run out and will have to start using more keystrokes. -
@Q139
I don't mean to be rude, and of course your code is up to you, but I think you will be the only person to find these macros "clearer". I would simply class them as "dangerous" --- goodness knows what you might "break" by defining single- or even two-character sequences as macros. And you are overloading, say,el
versusel(t)
to do completely different things. On top of everything, have you looked whether you will break, say, Qt Creator's auto-completion or folding etc. with these definitions?This is just not the C++ way to do things. Up to you.
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@Q139 said in Simplest way to for loop:
I tryed coding with those , in some places i think it can actually increase readability ,if familiar with the macros.
@JonB said in Simplest way to for loop:
This is just not the C++ way to do things.
This is not even the C way to do things, that's simply trying to reinvent the language by means of the preprocessor, what could possibly go wrong ...
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Reminds me of a guy that transitioned form Pascal to C++ and first thing he did was define bunch of macros like
#define begin { #define end } #define procedure void
If you decided to code in C++ code in C++. I completely agree with @kshegunov . Using preprocessor to reinvent the language is just straight up horrible.
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@Chris-Kawa I used to code a lot in Borland Pascal + TASM back in '90 but I would not even consider such... THING as the above. That's truly WAT moment for me.
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@JonB said in Simplest way to for loop:
On top of everything, have you looked whether you will break, say, Qt Creator's auto-completion or folding etc. with these definitions?
Project 35k lines ,no problems so far.If I continue adding macros at some point I would need a converter to detect the macros and convert to clean code.
It is sad that precompiler fails if adding other preprocessor macros like
#define ompFor #pragma omp parrallel for schedule(dynamic)