// This file is part of Eigen, a lightweight C++ template library // for linear algebra. // // Copyright (C) 2013 Christian Seiler // // This Source Code Form is subject to the terms of the Mozilla // Public License v. 2.0. If a copy of the MPL was not distributed // with this file, You can obtain one at http://mozilla.org/MPL/2.0/. #ifndef EIGEN_CXX11WORKAROUNDS_H #define EIGEN_CXX11WORKAROUNDS_H /* COMPATIBILITY CHECKS * (so users of compilers that are too old get some realistic error messages) */ #if defined(__INTEL_COMPILER) && (__INTEL_COMPILER < 1310) #error Intel Compiler only supports required C++ features since version 13.1. // note that most stuff in principle works with 13.0 but when combining // some features, at some point 13.0 will just fail with an internal assertion #elif defined(__GNUC__) && !defined(__clang__) && !defined(__INTEL_COMPILER) && (__GNUC__ < 4 || (__GNUC__ == 4 && __GNUC_MINOR__ < 6)) // G++ < 4.6 by default will continue processing the source files - even if we use #error to make // it error out. For this reason, we use the pragma to make sure G++ aborts at the first error // it sees. Unfortunately, that is still not our #error directive, but at least the output is // short enough the user has a chance to see that the compiler version is not sufficient for // the funky template mojo we use. #pragma GCC diagnostic error "-Wfatal-errors" #error GNU C++ Compiler (g++) only supports required C++ features since version 4.6. #endif /* Check that the compiler at least claims to support C++11. It might not be sufficient * because the compiler may not implement it correctly, but at least we'll know. * On the other hand, visual studio still doesn't claim to support C++11 although it's * compliant enugh for our purpose. */ #if (__cplusplus <= 199711L) && (EIGEN_COMP_MSVC < 1900) #if defined(__GNUC__) && !defined(__clang__) && !defined(__INTEL_COMPILER) #pragma GCC diagnostic error "-Wfatal-errors" #endif #error This library needs at least a C++11 compliant compiler. If you use g++/clang, please enable the -std=c++11 compiler flag. (-std=c++0x on older versions.) #endif namespace Eigen { namespace internal { /* std::get is only constexpr in C++14, not yet in C++11 */ template constexpr inline T& array_get(std::vector& a) { return a[I]; } template constexpr inline T&& array_get(std::vector&& a) { return a[I]; } template constexpr inline T const& array_get(std::vector const& a) { return a[I]; } /* Suppose you have a template of the form * template struct X; * And you want to specialize it in such a way: * template struct X> { ::: }; * template<> struct X> { ::: }; * This will work in Intel's compiler 13.0, but only to some extent in g++ 4.6, since * g++ can only match templates called with parameter packs if the number of template * arguments is not a fixed size (so inside the first specialization, referencing * X> will fail in g++). On the other hand, g++ will accept the following: * template struct X> { ::: }: * as an additional (!) specialization, which will then only match the empty case. * But Intel's compiler 13.0 won't accept that, it will only accept the empty syntax, * so we have to create a workaround for this. */ #if defined(__GNUC__) && !defined(__INTEL_COMPILER) #define EIGEN_TPL_PP_SPEC_HACK_DEF(mt, n) mt... n #define EIGEN_TPL_PP_SPEC_HACK_DEFC(mt, n) , EIGEN_TPL_PP_SPEC_HACK_DEF(mt, n) #define EIGEN_TPL_PP_SPEC_HACK_USE(n) n... #define EIGEN_TPL_PP_SPEC_HACK_USEC(n) , n... #else #define EIGEN_TPL_PP_SPEC_HACK_DEF(mt, n) #define EIGEN_TPL_PP_SPEC_HACK_DEFC(mt, n) #define EIGEN_TPL_PP_SPEC_HACK_USE(n) #define EIGEN_TPL_PP_SPEC_HACK_USEC(n) #endif } // end namespace internal } // end namespace Eigen #endif // EIGEN_CXX11WORKAROUNDS_H /* * kate: space-indent on; indent-width 2; mixedindent off; indent-mode cstyle; */